Abstract Background Conflict, poverty and HIV disproportionately affect people in sub-Saharan Africa. The manner in which governments, national and international organisations and the media report on the HIV epidemic in situations of conflict, post-conflict and reconstruction can have unintended and negative consequences for those affected populations. The media in particular has a huge influence on how the world observes and reacts to the HIV epidemic among conflict-affected and displaced populations. Discussion Three case studies focused on Sudan, Uganda and Guinea describe what the media reported and why the reports were incomplete, misleading or incorrect. The exploration of possible ways to ensure that the media do not unwittingly infl...
The current HIV/AIDS pandemic is the worst plague ever to afflict humanity, and unfortunately it is ...
This paper reviews the findings of two studies that tracked press coverage of HIV/AIDS in several so...
Media are an indispensable partner in health communication but, there is often concern about how the...
As a news topic, the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Africa is not a just health story. It is an amalgamation o...
The relationship between conflict, sexual violence and the spread of HIV is an important concern for...
Research on Western mainstream media’s framing of HIV/AIDS in the 1980’s, showed that media narrativ...
The causes and consequences of HIV and AIDS are social are well as biomedical. Given the scale of th...
One of the basic roles of journalism is to inform people about what is happening. Technically, we de...
Background There have been scholarly responses and peace-agents interventions to the reality of dise...
The argument that there is a link between conflict and the spread of HIV has become commonplace in b...
Africa south of Sahara is still bearing more than half of the world’s HIV/AIDS burden. Because medic...
The fight against HIV remains complicated with contracting donor resources and high burden of HIV am...
The purpose of this BA-thesis is to identify the patterns in the HIV/AIDS communication in four Nami...
From the mid-1970s, seven countries in sub-Saharan Africa have experienced civil disorders and wars ...
Copyright © 2013 Eric Koka et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Comm...
The current HIV/AIDS pandemic is the worst plague ever to afflict humanity, and unfortunately it is ...
This paper reviews the findings of two studies that tracked press coverage of HIV/AIDS in several so...
Media are an indispensable partner in health communication but, there is often concern about how the...
As a news topic, the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Africa is not a just health story. It is an amalgamation o...
The relationship between conflict, sexual violence and the spread of HIV is an important concern for...
Research on Western mainstream media’s framing of HIV/AIDS in the 1980’s, showed that media narrativ...
The causes and consequences of HIV and AIDS are social are well as biomedical. Given the scale of th...
One of the basic roles of journalism is to inform people about what is happening. Technically, we de...
Background There have been scholarly responses and peace-agents interventions to the reality of dise...
The argument that there is a link between conflict and the spread of HIV has become commonplace in b...
Africa south of Sahara is still bearing more than half of the world’s HIV/AIDS burden. Because medic...
The fight against HIV remains complicated with contracting donor resources and high burden of HIV am...
The purpose of this BA-thesis is to identify the patterns in the HIV/AIDS communication in four Nami...
From the mid-1970s, seven countries in sub-Saharan Africa have experienced civil disorders and wars ...
Copyright © 2013 Eric Koka et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Comm...
The current HIV/AIDS pandemic is the worst plague ever to afflict humanity, and unfortunately it is ...
This paper reviews the findings of two studies that tracked press coverage of HIV/AIDS in several so...
Media are an indispensable partner in health communication but, there is often concern about how the...