Elsevier

The Lancet

Volume 370, Issue 9581, 7–13 July 2007, Pages 10-11
The Lancet

Comment
Biomedical HIV prevention—and social science

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(07)61026-5Get rights and content

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    For the last twenty years, sexual health promotion and HIV prevention in the UK has, in large part, been premised on the assumption that biomedical and science-based understandings of illness form the framework within which treatment seeking and treatment management decisions are made (Johnson, Mercer, & Cassell, 2006). Such approaches imply people will act in a rational and responsible manner to maximize their opportunities for securing effective biomedical treatment (Schoepf, 2004) whilst giving little recognition to the broader social, cultural and economic context within which treatment seeking and management decisions are made (Imrie, Elford, Kippax, & Hart, 2007; Kesby, Fenton, Boyle, & Power, 2003). Recently however, attempts have been made within the UK health sector to move away from a purely science-based biomedical model of disease, to acknowledge and explore the more subjective, social and cultural dimensions of illness as they are experienced by people who are themselves living with ill health (Whelan, 2009).

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