2012
DOI: 10.1525/jer.2012.7.4.34
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Photovoice as a Community-Based Participatory Research Method among Women Living with HIV/AIDS: Ethical Opportunities and Challenges

Abstract: Photovoice is a method in which participants use photography to identify, express, and disseminate their experiences. We conducted photovoice projects with women living with HIV/AIDS (N=21) to explore opportunities and challenges associated with the method. Photovoice provided a means to achieve two key principles of ethical public health practice: It gives participants opportunities to define their health priorities, and facilitates participant empowerment. Ethical challenges that were encountered related to … Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(57 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
(43 reference statements)
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“…While PhotoVoice has been used extensively in HIV research to describe the experiences of women living with HIV (Moletsane et al, 2007), little research has addressed the personal benefits of PhotoVoice. Additionally, although PhotoVoice has been widely used in the context of poverty (Teti et al, 2012), activism (Moletsane et al, 2007), healthy relationships (Teti et al, 2012), empowerment (Teti et al, 2013), and intervention endorsement (Kubicek et al, 2012), its use in defining and describing specific experiences with HIV-related stigma in women of color has been limited and is worthy of further investigation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While PhotoVoice has been used extensively in HIV research to describe the experiences of women living with HIV (Moletsane et al, 2007), little research has addressed the personal benefits of PhotoVoice. Additionally, although PhotoVoice has been widely used in the context of poverty (Teti et al, 2012), activism (Moletsane et al, 2007), healthy relationships (Teti et al, 2012), empowerment (Teti et al, 2013), and intervention endorsement (Kubicek et al, 2012), its use in defining and describing specific experiences with HIV-related stigma in women of color has been limited and is worthy of further investigation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, PhotoVoice has been shown to be an effective tool for describing personal experiences and synthesizing solutions to problems (Moletsane et al, 2009). PhotoVoice also has been found to facilitate empowerment of economically disadvantaged minority WLWH (Teti, Pichon, Kabel, Farnan, & Binson, 2013), to promote adaptation of HIV prevention programs (Kubicek, Beyer, Weiss, & Kipke, 2012), define health priorities (Teti, Murray, Johnson, & Binson, 2012), and facilitate interpretation of stigma and discrimination (Moletsane et al, 2009). To address the aforementioned gaps in existing scholarship, we examined personal HIV-stigma experiences in Latina/Hispanic and African American women using Photovoice.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The use of visual methods for research or interventions among PLH can be fraught with potential ethical and confidentiality concerns (Teti, Murray, Johnson, & Binson, 2012). For instance, the traditional group nature of Photovoice projects means that participants automatically disclose their HIV status to other members of their group when they attend project sessions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By visualising these issues through local photographs, photovoice is a strong tool for capturing problems relevant to the lives of the photographers, their communities, and health priorities. 47,48 Several other social determinants of health such as unclean water and poor sanitation, lack of income generation among women and poor nutrition, are also key in improving maternal health. Yet they have not been prioritised in other community studies on maternal health in low-and middle-income countries.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%