2013
DOI: 10.1051/sm/2013081
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La perception de l’activité physique comme mode de prise de charge du VIH : effets de la visibilité du corps sur les stratégies de gestion d’une « maladie chronique »

Abstract: Reçu le 4 décembre 2012-Accepté le 13 mai 2013 Résumé. La fréquentation des systèmes de soins et d'aides, et la dépendanceà leurégard, n'at-elle pas des effets sur les modes de subjectivation ? Le traitement statistique des données d'une enquête nationale sur les personnes vivant avec le VIH montre comment l'intériorisation des ((bonnes pratiques)) dans le cadre d'une carrière de ((malade chronique)), est favorisée par la visibilité du VIH et participe d'un processus de production sociale du corps vulnérable. … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The latter concept considers that people have agency to "choose" to a certain extent how they live with or manage chronic illness. Recent research has suggested that such "choices" as well as the physical experience of HIV are facetted by social contexts of interaction, and an interplay between the sentiment of HIV (in)visibility (Persson 2005;Thomas et al 2014;Alexias et al 2016) and the acceptability of disclosing HIV or physical symptoms (Mackworth-Young, Bond, and Wringe 2020; Schuft et al 2018). These findings suggest that illness narratives are influenced by both physical experiencesregarding the body, treatments or symptomsand social experiences along illness trajectories.…”
Section: Conceptual Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The latter concept considers that people have agency to "choose" to a certain extent how they live with or manage chronic illness. Recent research has suggested that such "choices" as well as the physical experience of HIV are facetted by social contexts of interaction, and an interplay between the sentiment of HIV (in)visibility (Persson 2005;Thomas et al 2014;Alexias et al 2016) and the acceptability of disclosing HIV or physical symptoms (Mackworth-Young, Bond, and Wringe 2020; Schuft et al 2018). These findings suggest that illness narratives are influenced by both physical experiencesregarding the body, treatments or symptomsand social experiences along illness trajectories.…”
Section: Conceptual Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%