The HIV/AIDS epidemic in northwest Tanzania has profoundly shaped the experience of growing old. Older men and women take on new care tasks, such as caring for orphaned grandchildren and nursing dying patients. Yet, at the same time, while the elderly grow older, their own old-age care becomes increasingly uncertain. Situating older people’s stories in debates around kinship and relating, this detailed ethnographic account captures the diverse experiences of growing old in the era of AIDS and shows how this process implies a tension between the increased necessity to forge relations of care and the confrontation with the aging body
Prevalence of HIV after age 50 is considerable, especially in southern Africa. Negative social const...
Background. How people experience and negotiate growing old in rural Africa is under-researched and ...
Grounded in ethnographic field research in Tanzania, this chapter asks what happens when older peopl...
As a result of HIV/AIDS older men and women in northwest Tanzania bear a growing responsibility with...
Introduction Tanzania is one of the sub-Saharan countries that has been greatly impacted by HIV/AIDS...
The burden of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (...
Older adults ageing with HIV in Africa have been largely neglected, despite the distinctive healthca...
As the HIV epidemic ages, health systems globally are faced with the reality that infected persons w...
The PhD thesis explores what “growing into old age” means for women and men in coastal Tanzania and ...
As part of the chronic disease paradigm now widely used for HIV in sub-Saharan Africa, antiretrovi...
As part of the chronic disease paradigm now widely used for HIV in sub-Saharan Africa, antiretrovira...
To date, most social anthropological studies on aging in African contexts focus on care for poor old...
The ageing of the HIV population is unfolding within the context of a politicised history of medical...
Is the AIDS epidemic having an impact on the coping behaviour and health status of the elderly
An estimated 58 million persons aged 60-plus live in sub-Saharan Africa; by 2050 that number will ri...
Prevalence of HIV after age 50 is considerable, especially in southern Africa. Negative social const...
Background. How people experience and negotiate growing old in rural Africa is under-researched and ...
Grounded in ethnographic field research in Tanzania, this chapter asks what happens when older peopl...
As a result of HIV/AIDS older men and women in northwest Tanzania bear a growing responsibility with...
Introduction Tanzania is one of the sub-Saharan countries that has been greatly impacted by HIV/AIDS...
The burden of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (...
Older adults ageing with HIV in Africa have been largely neglected, despite the distinctive healthca...
As the HIV epidemic ages, health systems globally are faced with the reality that infected persons w...
The PhD thesis explores what “growing into old age” means for women and men in coastal Tanzania and ...
As part of the chronic disease paradigm now widely used for HIV in sub-Saharan Africa, antiretrovi...
As part of the chronic disease paradigm now widely used for HIV in sub-Saharan Africa, antiretrovira...
To date, most social anthropological studies on aging in African contexts focus on care for poor old...
The ageing of the HIV population is unfolding within the context of a politicised history of medical...
Is the AIDS epidemic having an impact on the coping behaviour and health status of the elderly
An estimated 58 million persons aged 60-plus live in sub-Saharan Africa; by 2050 that number will ri...
Prevalence of HIV after age 50 is considerable, especially in southern Africa. Negative social const...
Background. How people experience and negotiate growing old in rural Africa is under-researched and ...
Grounded in ethnographic field research in Tanzania, this chapter asks what happens when older peopl...