ISA DA SILVA SORRENTINO
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
LIM/38 - Laboratório de Epidemiologia e Imunobiologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
4 resultados
Resultados de Busca
Agora exibindo 1 - 4 de 4
conferenceObject Willingness to use HIV self-tests among female sex workers from diverse sex work contexts: A qualitative study in Sao(2021) FERRAZ, D.; MURRAY, L.; SORRENTINO, I.; ZUCCHI, E. Miura; GRANGEIRO, A.- The impact of Covid-19 on marginalized groups: the contribution of Intersectionality as theoretical and political perspective(2021) MARQUES, Ana Lucia Marinho; SORRENTINO, Isa da Silva; RODRIGUES, Julliana Luiz; MACHIN, Rosana; OLIVEIRACC, Elda de; COUTOM, Marcia TherezaThe Covid-19 pandemic poses a number of challenges to governments and society. The pandemic has detrimental effects on regions characterized by deep social inequality and the most vulnerable populations, leading to the need for theoretical and methodological frameworks to help understand its impacts and build strategies to address them. This critical essay addresses the interconnection between social markers of the difference in the production of the inequalities that affect marginalized social groups, such as homeless drug users, sex workers, domestic workers and the young LGBTQIA+ community, and analyzes the strengths of the intersectional perspective for the analysis of problems and construction of policies to tackle them.
- Methodological issues in qualitative research on HIV prevention: an integrative review(2023) SPADACIO, Cristiane; SANTOS, Lorruan Alves dos; SORRENTINO, Isa da Silva; GOMES, Romeu; CASTELLANOS, Marcelo Eduardo Pfeiffer; ZUCCHI, Eliana Miura; GRANGEIRO, Alexandre; COUTO, Marcia TherezaIn view of the growing concern about the use of qualitative approach in health research, this article aims to analyze how the qualitative theoretical -method-ological framework of HIV prevention is presented in empirical research. We conducted an integrative literature review with the following guiding ques-tions: ""How is the qualitative theoretical-methodological framework expressed in empirical research on HIV prevention?""; ""What are the limits and poten-tials of the qualitative methodological designs employed?"". In the qualitative methodological discussion, five dimensions guided the methodological course and the presentation of findings, from the analysis of the characterization of qualitative studies to the contextualization of the studies and the methodologi-cal approaches used, highlighting the use of semi-structured interviews with thematic content analysis. We also examined social categories and analytical references, drawing attention to the plurality of these theoretical-conceptual references and to the authors' polyphony, and identified the limits and po-tentials of qualitative research. This study focuses on a scientific topic that is related to a wide variety of social groups and analyzes how they are af-fected by it, examining issues related to social inequality and other analytical possibilities surrounding HIV prevention, and providing resources for a com-prehensive methodological discussion. Hence, avoiding the risk of conducting qualitative research based on checklists that limit inventiveness and openness to different designs and forms of execution and analysis is as pivotal as ensur-ing that the research is consistent and detailed in publications.
- Autonomy and Care in Context: The Paradox of Sex Workers' Acceptability of HIV Self-Tests in Sao Paulo, Brazil(2022) MURRAY, Laura Rebecca; FERRAZ, Dulce; ZUCCHI, Eliana Miura; SORRENTINO, Isa da Silva; GRANGEIRO, AlexandreCisgender female sex workers (CFSW) continue to face structural barriers to HIV prevention. We analyzed the acceptability of the oral HIV self-test (HIV-ST) among CFSW as part of a pragmatic trial on HIV prevention in Brazil. Data from in-depth interviews conducted with 12 women from diverse sex worker contexts and participant observation were analyzed using thematic analysis. CFSW valued autonomy in their workplaces and saw the HIV-ST as a possibility for self-care. Some feared clients' reactions, manager reprimands, and a positive result. HIV and sex work stigma largely drove self-care practices and perceived acceptability of the self-test. We argue that the autonomy offered by the self-test presents a paradox: increasing autonomy on the one hand while risking sidestepping structural dimensions of HIV vulnerability on the other. These nuances must be considered in interventions promoting the HIV-ST by considering the specificities of sex worker contexts, addressing stigma, and effectively involving CFSW and their organizations in intervention development.