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RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Stigma, support, and messaging for people recently diagnosed with HIV: a qualitative study

Loretta M. Healey https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5718-861X A , Shirin R. Markham A , David J. Templeton A B C D , Lionel Rabie E and Anthony K. J. Smith https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0005-9542 F G *
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Sexual Health Medicine, Community Health, Sydney Local Health District, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia.

B Sexual Assault Medical Service, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney Local Health District, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia.

C The Kirby Institute, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.

D Central Clinical School, The Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.

E ACON, Sydney, NSW 2010, Australia.

F Centre for Social Research in Health, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.

G Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.

* Correspondence to: anthony.smith@unsw.edu.au

Handling Editor: Tiffany Renee Phillips

Sexual Health 21, SH24045 https://doi.org/10.1071/SH24045
Submitted: 27 February 2024  Accepted: 3 October 2024  Published: 17 October 2024

© 2024 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC)

Abstract

Background

Despite advances in antiretroviral treatment and the message of undetectable equals untransmittable (U=U), there remain challenges related to stigma and quality of life for people living with HIV. This study aimed to understand the experiences of people recently diagnosed with HIV at a clinical service, to guide insights into how to improve care and support in the contemporary treatment era.

Methods

This qualitative study involved semi-structured interviews with individuals diagnosed with HIV between 2016 and 2021 at RPA Sexual Health service (a sexual health clinic in Sydney, Australia), or who were referred to the clinic directly after diagnosis. Participants were recruited through a short survey questionnaire between May 2022 and May 2023, and interviews were transcribed and analysed thematically.

Results

Fourteen participants were interviewed for the study, eight of whom were born outside of Australian or Aotearoa New Zealand. We found that diagnosis was still a shocking event requiring careful support; that there was ongoing stigma, shame, and reduced sexual confidence following diagnosis; and that beyond initial diagnosis, some people would benefit from ongoing support and education about key concepts regarding HIV treatment.

Conclusion

Our study suggests that HIV diagnosis remains disruptive, and sexual stigma is a key issue negatively impacting quality of life. Health providers can mitigate these issues by supporting the ongoing psychosocial needs of people with HIV in the early period of adjusting to HIV diagnosis, and referring to peer-based and other services. Initiating conversations about sex and dating and checking understandings of key health messages over time may promote improved care.

Keywords: Australia, diagnosis, healthcare workers, HIV, men, sexual behaviour, sexual confidence, stigma, treatment.

Introduction

Australia has seen a significant reduction in new HIV diagnoses over the past 10 years. Diagnoses among gay and bisexual men decreased by 52% between 2012 and 2021.1 Biomedical prevention, including HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and treatment as prevention (TasP), have driven this decrease in new HIV diagnoses.2,3 Despite fewer HIV diagnoses and better treatment options, it is vital to continue to understand the experiences of being diagnosed with HIV, to ensure that service delivery meets the needs of people with HIV (PWHIV).

Engaging people diagnosed with HIV to commence and sustain taking antiretroviral therapy, also known as TasP,2,4,5 is beneficial for personal health, and reduces onward HIV transmission. Studies on HIV transmission in the context of treatment have led to international consensus that a person with an undetectable viral load cannot transmit HIV to sexual partners.68 The Prevention Access Campaign9 developed the term ‘Undetectable equals Untransmittable’ (U=U), which led to an awareness-raising campaign, launched in 2016, to promote the wellbeing of PWHIV and reduce sexual stigma and discrimination.1012 In 2018, the Australasian Society for HIV, Viral Hepatitis and Sexual Health Medicine (ASHM) released guidance to clinicians to promote conversations with patients about U=U.13 While U=U has supported many couples with mixed HIV status to experience a relationship not threatened or disrupted by HIV, experiences or anticipation of stigma remain a challenge.1416 The ‘NSW HIV strategy 2021–2025’ has set a target of a 75% reduction in reported experience of stigma or discrimination by people living with HIV in NSW healthcare settings.17

Qualitative studies in Australia have found that people recently diagnosed react to diagnosis with a mix of reactions: some felt calm, but most reported feeling shocked, numb, and distressed, with reactions often linked to stigmatising attitudes towards HIV.14,18,19 These studies have identified that the provision of up-to-date HIV information and resources, counselling, and support opportunities at the time of diagnosis and in the months following, and services to meet other PWHIV are important in facilitating adjustment to living with HIV.

It is important to note that the changing epidemiology of people being diagnosed with HIV in Australia means that people who are diagnosed in the current era may have different needs. In 2022, 167 NSW residents were notified to NSW Health with a newly diagnosed HIV infection, 33% less than the 2017–2021 average of 251.20 Ninety of the 167 (54%) new diagnoses were in people born overseas. Recent diagnoses have been concentrated among gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men born in central or south-east Asia, or the Americas and those who might be less community connected, thus have had less access to information about TasP and U=U prior to diagnosis.20 The reasons for the increase in the proportion of HIV diagnoses among individuals arriving from Asia and the Americas are varied and complex.21,22 Changing migration patterns, lack of knowledge of free sexual health care and difficulty accessing PrEP may be contributing. Some individuals may have been subjected to repressive sexual social norms potentially affecting their comfort in accessing gay-friendly services.23,24 Awareness of the changing epidemiology of HIV in Australia is vital to understand the needs of those at risk of acquiring HIV.

In the context of changing HIV epidemiology in the era of U=U, this study aimed to investigate the experiences of PWHIV who were recently diagnosed at RPA Sexual Health, a sexual health clinic in the inner west of Sydney, Australia. As part of a quality improvement project, we sought to understand their experience of receiving their diagnosis of HIV, how their lives have been impacted by the diagnosis, and how initial and ongoing services at the clinic could better support their holistic health.

Materials and methods

RPA Sexual Health has a catchment that includes 5 of the 10 suburbs in Australia where the highest proportion gay male couples live.25 As a publicly funded sexual health centre, the service is free to all people regardless of visa status or citizenship. The clinic provides routine HIV and sexual health testing and treatment, HIV care and counselling services. The service provides ongoing HIV care to approximately 400 PWHIV.

Individuals who tested positive for HIV at RPA Sexual Health between 2016 and 2021, or who were immediately referred to RPA Sexual Health on receipt of their HIV diagnosis elsewhere, were eligible to participate. An online survey was offered to eligible participants via email and telephone. Respondents were asked if they would consent to being contacted for a follow-up interview about their experiences. Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted by a member of RPA Sexual Health staff who was not employed at the clinic during the period that individuals were diagnosed. Written informed consent was provided by survey respondents and audio consent was obtained prior to interviews. Ethics approval for this research was obtained from The Sydney Local Health District Ethics Review Committee (Royal Prince Alfred Zone. Approval: 2021/ETH01439).

The interviews were conducted face-to-face or over Zoom, depending on participant preference. Interviews ranged in time between 31 min and 1 h 9 min. They were conducted between May 2022 and May 2023. Interviews were audio-recorded, professionally transcribed, and checked for accuracy. The interview guide was developed by the research team.

Those participating in the interviews were asked about their experience of receiving the HIV diagnosis, how they felt, their fears, thoughts, what they found helpful at the time and what was not helpful. Participants were asked about their experiences of post-diagnosis health care, and the impact of the diagnosis, in particular their intimate relationships and sexual confidence. The participants were allocated pseudonyms in this paper to protect their privacy.

As there were fewer survey questionnaire respondents than anticipated, the survey was primarily used to recruit participants for the interviews and we do not discuss the survey findings in this paper. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the interview transcripts, with a focus on identifying common patterns of meaning related to experiences of diagnosis, care, and living with HIV.26 The transcripts were read through multiple times with margin notes made, then coded for common concepts and topics. The investigators discussed the concepts and found the issues raised by participants could be refined into three broad themes, which are presented in this paper.

Results

Of 123 invited participants, 23 people completed the online survey (18.7%). Of those, 21 (91.3%) expressed a willingness to be interviewed about their experiences with 14 individuals (60.9%) attending for an interview.

Of the 14 participants who were interviewed, 8 were born outside Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand. Five were born in Asia, two in Africa, and one in South America. Twelve people described their sexual orientation as gay, one as heterosexual, and one as bisexual. Twelve men were in paid employment, one was a full-time student, and one was retired. The age range of the interviewees was 24–67 years (median 33).

We identified three themes from the interviews, described below.

Theme 1: an HIV diagnosis remains a distressing event requiring support

Most participants reflected that the experience of receiving an HIV diagnosis was distressing, indicating that it was a life changing event:

[It was] quite devastating, actually… . Whatever I had planned, it’s going to end now or changed… I was in shock. Nothing. I couldn’t think of anything apart from, you know, bawling my eye out. Crying. Then I couldn’t think of anything much. (Anh, age 20s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2018).

Feelings of self-blame were articulated by some participants:

I couldn’t think of anything worse physically, mentally… in such a hole of misery and disbelief’ ‘I was kicking myself… . all the beating myself up. (Nick, age 40s, gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2020).

A few participants experienced suicidal thoughts, which had led Duy to engage with counselling at the clinic:

If I do something about…suicide, it’s very close. That’s why (I) talk to the counsellor, to make sure that I can overcome the situation. (Duy, age 30s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2016).

Participants explained that the feelings of shock and distress they experienced was based on anticipated stigma and the expectation that they may face social rejection in the future:

Like, oh, there’s no hope for me, and maybe people will be disgusted with me… I feel like it’s too much, it’s too overwhelming at that time… I’m completely lost. (Sunny, age 20s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2020).

While distress was the most common reaction to receiving an HIV diagnosis, a small number of participants reported feeling calm. In these instances, it had been expected that their HIV test would be positive, and they therefore appeared to be more prepared:

I still had my partner at the time, he was positive, and we obviously had unprotected sex. So, I wasn’t surprised, I actually wasn’t shocked at all… . actually, I was relieved in a way… . I went on meds and then I just carried on. (Matt, age 50s, gay, born in Aotearoa New Zealand, diagnosed 2016).

But because it was confirming what I already expected, I think I’d had a little bit of time to prepare myself, I guess, for that. So, maybe I wasn’t as freaked out as other people were. (Troy, age 30s, gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2019).

Although receiving a diagnosis was shocking for most, participants also reported that healthcare workers (HCWs) were helpful and supportive. Daniel (age 60s, heterosexual, born in Africa, diagnosed 2019) found it useful how his counsellor and doctor helped to ‘get rid of myths’ he held about HIV. Similarly, another participant explained:

They were very kind…basically… I think the first thing that they did say to me was, it is no longer a death sentence, there is meds, there is treatment and you’ll be on treatment for the rest of your life. (Oscar, age 20s, gay, born in Africa, diagnosed 2016).

Participants emphasised that the content of what was said at the time of diagnosis was less important than how the clinician spoke to them, and the shock and distress experienced at the time of diagnosis meant that some participants could not remember the content. ‘[I don’t remember] the actual thing that he said to me. He was very gentle…’ (Anh, age 20s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2018).

Theme 2: stigma, shame, and reduced sexual confidence following an HIV diagnosis

Most participants reported a reduction in sexual confidence following diagnosis. Participants shared accounts which suggested anticipated and internalised stigma affected their ability to enjoy a flourishing sexual life. For example, some participants reflected on the stigmatising attitudes they had held towards people living with HIV prior to their diagnosis:

My greatest concern, and still remains today, would just be the stigma that’s associated with it. And I, myself, have been guilty of that. [before diagnosis] I actually met a guy, and he told me that he was HIV positive, and my behaviour was, ‘oh my god, this is bad.’ So, I look back at that now, and I’m like, fuck, I should’ve handled that in a very different way. But I was young, and I didn’t understand undetectable and the pills that are available today’ (Troy, age 30s, gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2019).

Shame and anticipated stigma also inhibited some participants ability to pursue dating or sex, with some giving up on ever having a relationship:

I just can’t, I don’t like being hugged, I can’t be touched. And guys, all they want to do is bloody fucking have sex. […] I actually talk myself out of [sex], and I feel like I can’t even get it up. Just all sexual drive is gone. (Luke, age 40s, gay, born in Aotearoa New Zealand, diagnosed 2017).

Has it impacted my love relationships? Yes, it has. I think I steer clear from maybe even building a relationship with someone, because I know that [HIV status] might then be a question that needs to be discussed sometime in the future. (Oscar, age 24 years, gay, born in Africa, diagnosed 2016).

Tim reported that he was no longer able to have sex without the use of drugs:

I was avoidant of sex. The only time I thought I could have sex was when I was using drugs, which is the opposite of what I was like before my diagnosis […] I actually haven’t been able to have proper sex since. (Re sexual confidence) I still don’t have it back. I don’t have any, I have very little sexual confidence. (Tim, age 30s, gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2018).

These participants were fearful of being rejected by potential sexual or romantic partners when disclosing their HIV status. Participants shared how this operated as an ongoing conflict about if and when to tell partners. Most said that they felt obliged to tell intimate partners creating a huge emotional burden when preparing to disclose:

My first thought [when diagnosed] was I’ve just gone into this relationship. We’d been dating for a couple of months already. My first thought was this is the only person I have to tell but it’s like the worst person to have to tell. (Sam, age 30s, gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2020).

Some participants reported preparing themselves for rejection when disclosing their HIV status to a sexual partner:

Pretty much each and every time I decided to tell someone, I would be ready for them to walk out. Like, metaphorically, or whatever, just to walk out. (Anh, age 20s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2018).

I told him, listen you can go, you can leave me, that’s okay, I’m positive. You know what I mean? I don’t want you stay with me just because you feel guilty or you feel sorry to me (Sunny, age 20s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2020).

The message of U=U was valuable and reassuring for many participants’ sense of personal health and wellbeing. For some, it appeared to be helpful for their confidence around dating and sex:

It helped, actually. Because knowing that if we engage in anything romantic at all, then I wouldn’t be able to pass on the virus to the other person… . It gave me that peace of mind. (Anh, age 20s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2018).

However, for some, U=U was not as useful. For one participant, the limitation of U=U was that it does not change that you are still a person living with HIV and the associated stigma of the diagnosis:

It did have a good impact on me, knowing I couldn’t pass it on. But then, there was another element of knowing that I was defective, maybe… I was just like this person with this virus in them… (Tim, age 30s, gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2016).

Another participant found it difficult to communicate U=U:

How can I start [explaining it]. Too much information. I’m not too confident about that information. (30s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2016).

For a minority of respondents who were still in a relationship with the partner they had at the time they received their diagnosis, their sexual confidence had not changed: For example, Aran (age 30s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2018) said: ‘It was normal. It doesn’t have impact to both of us.’ and Sam (age 30s gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2020) said: ‘[It’s] probably the same as before because I’m still dating the same person.’

Theme 3: ongoing attention to quality care from health professionals is crucial

Participants broadly found HCWs to be supportive and reassuring following diagnosis and in subsequent clinical visits. Concise, clear, and consistent messaging were key to people feeling reassured:

Yes, I feel like when I talk with them, they’re really listening to you. And I feel so much better knowing, as a person that carries such a heavy thing like that, and they’re telling you that you’re not alone, and you will get through this one day. (Sunny, age 20s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2020).

Reminders by staff that you can have a normal life… . Seeing the counsellor. Getting consistent messages from doctor nurse and counsellor (Duy, age 30s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2016).

Some men identified counselling, peer support and cultural support as important factors that enabled a better adjustment to living with HIV:

Seeing the counsellor until I feel better… (the Cultural Support Worker and I) met outside the clinic, once a month, or maybe two a month, … The (cultural support) appointment depends on us, like when I have free time, until I feel a bit better. (Duy, age 30s, gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2016).

The value of a peer-based group programme was identified by participants with one expressing that he wishes the counsellor had ‘pressured’ him to go in the early days after diagnosis:

She referred me straight away but I don’t know why it took me so long, but it was… I didn’t actually go … . It was almost a year before I actually enrolled, and I think that was a mistake. I think I would been a lot better off had I done that sooner (Oscar, age 20s, gay, born in Africa, diagnosed 2016).

While most participants reported good experiences with clinicians, some participants pointed out that HCWs appeared to assume that they understood clinical concepts related to HIV when they did not, pointing to dissonances in health literacy:

I don’t really understand that. So, your viral load, and whatnot? I don’t know, I just go there and they tell me that I’m okay, and then I leave […] I get it explained to me, but it just goes right over my head. (Luke, age 40s, gay Aotearoa New Zealand, diagnosed 2017).

I received the information, I can hear, but not really understand at the moment. (Duy, age 30s, gay, born in Asia, diagnosed 2016).

One participant also suggested that how care was provided could feel like a tick-box exercise:

But the counsellor service just felt robotic […] On reflection, it just felt like a tick and flick. It didn’t feel like a nurturing experience. (Tim, age 30s, gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2018).

Another participant, who was diagnosed during COVID-19 lockdown restrictions, felt that that consultations were rushed:

I felt like the explanations, everything that came up was all very brief, and I remember walking out of appointments being like I really need more clarification on a lot of things. (Sam, age 30s, gay, born in Australia, diagnosed 2020).

Additionally, the experience of care during diagnosis was felt by one participant to be of a high quality, but he perceived attention to care diminished after this early period:

Afterwards medical became perfunctory and routine. MOs under time pressure. Initial stuff was excellent, then (the doctor) left and I didn’t have one dedicated doctor. I don’t feel like there is continuity… . Overall treatment was still really good. (Daniel, 60s, heterosexual, born in Africa diagnosed 2019).

Overall, participants felt well supported during their initial diagnosis, and many indicated that clinicians were helpful beyond this period. However, some indicated dissonances in communication over key concepts in HIV (e.g. viral load) or that attention to care over time diminished. It appeared that COVID-19 restrictions on care also made some participants feel like the quality of care they received was reduced.

Discussion

In the era of U=U and TasP, people recently diagnosed with HIV in this study experienced HIV diagnosis as a life changing event, with the stigma of the virus impacting on wellbeing and their confidence with sex and dating in the short and long term.

The shock and distress experienced at the time of diagnosis in the current era has been documented in other research.14,18,19 While HCWs focus on outcomes such as reaching an undetectable viral load, there also needs to be greater attention on enduring issues such as psychological health and the impact of stigma, which persist after diagnosis and treatment uptake. We found that the level of distress at diagnosis, the ongoing impact of stigma and reduction in sexual confidence was experienced by most of our participants regardless of cultural background. However, those on temporary visas experienced an added burden of worrying about whether achieving permanent residency in Australia would be possible if that was their aim. Providing more opportunities to check in with patients, more time in consultations and allowing time for patients to absorb information is crucial in assisting patients to adjust to living with HIV. Wells and colleagues27 identified the importance of referral to peer-based programs to assist with adjustment to living with HIV and to reduce the sense of isolation that come with the diagnosis. However, it was also found that a referral for peer support needs to factor in more than a shared HIV status, but rather consideration of peer identities related to race, sexuality, and gender.27 HCWs should also consider referral to peer-based services beyond the initial diagnosis; but as one participant suggested, it took a while to feel comfortable to access peer support.

Telling sexual partners about one’s HIV status remains very difficult.14,28 The experience was expressed as inner conflict about if and when to tell partners. Despite the NSW Public Health Law that focuses on protection of a partner rather than disclosure,29 people felt obliged to tell their partners while finding that these people are the most difficult people to tell. This context of disclosure is likely to be further complicated in NSW, where affirmative sexual consent laws have been introduced.30 The law includes specific reference to the use of fraudulent inducement to persuade a person to have sex. If an individual is asked about their HIV status and lies, any sexual activity that follows may be considered non-consensual.31 Thus, navigating sexual relationships remains a complex and potentially anxiety provoking issue for some PWHIV and may lead to reduced sexual pleasure and intimacy. Stigma, whether internalised, anticipated, and/or felt, continues to be the biggest barrier to psychological and sexual adjustment to diagnosis. Other research14,19 have emphasised the need for HCWs to focus on the impact of stigma as well as viral suppression and physical wellbeing. In our study, the negative impact of stigma on sexual lives was prevalent. Those who reported no change in their sexual life were the minority, and this often related to being in an existing relationship at the time of diagnosis. The sense of loss experienced by men was evident, with some reporting that they had given up on ever having a long and intimate relationship, and others reported losing their sexual drive completely.

Although HIV treatment may appear to be much simpler than previous generations of antiretrovirals, it is important that HCWs do not make assumptions about an individual’s health literacy. Dissonance in communication between healthcare professionals and patients has been identified in previous research. McCormack and colleagues’32 research at Sydney Sexual Health Centre suggests that models of care for PWHIV assume high health literacy and may not support individuals who have barriers due to low health literacy and people for whom English is not their first language.33 This was evident in our study, as the sample comprised many culturally and linguistically diverse people. Some participants in our study reported that the medical information was not understood, or that they had difficulties knowing how to communicate concepts such as undetectable viral load to sexual or dating partners. For individuals born overseas, further support may be critical to ensure that they can better understand health information. In bringing a cultural lens to the discussion, cultural support workers can bridge the gap between the medical information received by the client with the aid of an interpreter and understanding the complexity of the information. Some participants noted that while they felt very supported in the early period after diagnosis, afterwards visits became more perfunctory and routine. The reasons for clinic visits became getting blood tests and a prescription rather than longer appointments where psychosocial issues could be explored. As a result of our study, clinic staff at RPA sexual health now address this gap by checking in with patients 1 year after their diagnosis about the experience of living with HIV and the impact, if any, on their sexual confidence. Also, clinicians have been encouraged to explore any experiences of stigma, internal or external and remind them that counselling and peer supports are available to them at any time.

This study has some key limitations. The sample comprised participants attending one clinic site, and a small number of respondents completed the survey. While this resulted in fewer potential qualitative interviews, we were still able to generate a rich analysis from the interviews, which comprised a large proportion of participants from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, and a diverse range of ages. Our analysis focused on what the clinic could learn from this cohort of patients diagnosed in the past 5 years, and our findings build on and affirm insights related to stigma and care observed in other studies.14,19,27

Conclusion

Our study highlights the need for health practitioners to provide psychosocial support to people diagnosed with HIV, beyond the point of initial diagnosis. Enabling individuals time and multiple opportunities to ask questions and absorb information is valuable, especially in the context of poor health literacy and different cultural understandings of health care. Concise and consistent messaging are important in HIV care. Counselling, cultural support and peer support are especially valuable, and people may need to be reminded that these services exist, acknowledging that they may not be ready to engage with other services during the initial period of shock following diagnosis. The findings from this study suggest that it would be valuable for HCWs to specifically ask questions about sex and dating with patients over time, which we have implemented at RPA sexual health because of this study. The emphasis on once or twice-yearly short visits for HIV monitoring, while convenient for some, may make it more difficult for some patients to be able to explore holistic challenges they are facing in their lives with an HCW. Affording opportunities to open further conversations about these topics may enable some people with HIV more ways to address stigma and engage in support.

Data availability

Data from this study cannot be made available as it contains sensitive information that participants did not consent to sharing.

Conflicts of interest

Anthony K. J. Smith is an Associate Editor of Sexual Health. To mitigate this potential conflict of interest they had no editor-level access to this manuscript during peer review. The authors have no further conflicts of interest to declare.

Declaration of funding

The study was partly funded by an Allied Health Research Grant from Sydney Local Health District.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the study participants for sharing their experiences to help us gain a greater understanding of the impact of HIV on the lives of those recently diagnosed.

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