Litcius/Paper detail

Not Another Medication Adherence App

Juan F. Maestre, Patrycja Zdziarska, Aehong Min, Anna Baglione, Chia-Fang Chung, Patrick C. Shih

2021Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

People living with HIV experience a high level of stigma in our society. Public HIV-related stigma often leads to anxiety and depression and hinders access to social support and proper medical care. Technologies for HIV, however, have been mainly designed for treatment management and medication adherence rather than for helping people cope with public HIV-related stigma specifically. Drawing on empirical data obtained from semi-structured interviews and design activities with eight social workers and 29 people living with HIV, we unpack the ways in which needs for privacy and trust, intimacy, and social support create tensions around key coping strategies. Reflecting on these tensions, we present design implications and opportunities to empower people living with HIV to cope with public HIV-related stigma at the individual level.

Topics & Concepts

Stigma (botany)Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Social supportCoping (psychology)AnxietyPsychologySocial stigmaMedicineSocial psychologyPsychiatryFamily medicineHIV/AIDS Research and InterventionsSexuality, Behavior, and TechnologyInnovative Human-Technology Interaction