Healthcare, Vol. 13, Pages 891: What Has Been Studied About Attitudes and Social Stigma Towards HIV/AIDS? A Global Bibliometric Study with Correlations on Global Health HIV-Related Indicators


Healthcare, Vol. 13, Pages 891: What Has Been Studied About Attitudes and Social Stigma Towards HIV/AIDS? A Global Bibliometric Study with Correlations on Global Health HIV-Related Indicators

Healthcare doi: 10.3390/healthcare13080891

Authors:
Yelson Alejandro Picón-Jaimes
Ivan David Lozada-Martinez
Mar Rosàs Tosas
Juan Tiraboschi
Ornella Fiorillo-Moreno
Valmore Bermúdez

Introduction: This study aimed to assess, through health metrics and bibliometric analysis, the global research on attitudes and social stigma of people living with HIV/AIDS and to identify research findings, gaps, and future directions. Methods: A cross-sectional bibliometric study was conducted through a structured search in different databases. Fifteen thousand four hundred and ninety-six documents were found between 1981 and 2024. Results: 83.5% were original articles, and international co-authorship was 30.66%. Since 2000, there has been an increase in research on HIV/AIDS attitudes and social stigma. The United States is the most prolific country worldwide (n = 7837 publications; 50.5%), with the highest number of prolific institutions (n = 4/5), as well as the greatest influence and relevance in research (h-index 170). The most studied topics worldwide are social support and social psychology concerning homosexuality, middle age, and youth in people living with HIV/AIDS. There was no significant correlation between the volume of publications, countries’ income levels, and the most prolific geographic regions with adult HIV prevalence, overall HIV incidence and prevalence, or antiretroviral therapy coverage in people living with HIV (p > 0.05 for all cases). Conclusions: Over the past two decades, research has shifted from human rights, legal rights, and ethics to attitudes toward healthcare, with the recent interest in pre-exposure prophylaxis, gender minorities, and intersectional stigma. The absence of strong correlations between publications volume and global health HIV-related indicators underscores the necessity of translating evidence into actionable strategies to reduce stigma and improve health outcomes.



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Yelson Alejandro Picón-Jaimes www.mdpi.com