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Oct. 1, 2018

Reducing health and social inequities among immigrants who are living with HIV in Canada

Dr. Añiela dela Cruz is looking at the impact of mandatory HIV screening during the Canadian immigration application processes
Dr. Añiela dela Cruz, assistant professor, ݮƵ Nursing
Dr. Añiela dela Cruz, assistant professor and team member Jillene Richter, ݮƵ Nursing Colleen De Neve

As part of the Canadian immigration application processes, mandatory HIV screening has been in place since 2002. While Añiela dela Cruz started her research career examining how the perception of HIV/AIDS changes as people cross borders and implications for transmission and infection, she is now exploring the impact this policy has on people living with HIV.

dela Cruz is part of the Newcomer, HIV, Immigration, Treatment Engagement and Stigma in Canada (NewHITES) Community-Based Research Team, leading a national study looking at internalized stigma experienced by African and Caribbean immigrants living with HIV and the experience of this mandatory HIV screening.

Using a mixed-methods approach, the NewHITES team collected data from 123 participants and conducted interviews with 34. Preliminary results show inconsistencies in the areas of informed consent, pre-HIV test counselling, post-HIV test counselling and referral to health-care services or follow-up care.

The study also found that nearly half of respondents learned about being HIV positive for the first time during the medical exam. “It appears that many people we worked with were experiencing stigma during the mandatory HIV screening process of immigration exams and not consistently getting connected to services during the migration and settlement process,” says dela Cruz.

dela Cruz says the long-term aim of her team’s research is to explore new approaches in providing HIV prevention, care and support services for this particular newcomer population.

“We’re looking at HIV stigma in the context of migration and settlement, and the other layer is immigration process and policies,” she says. “Once we have that info, we can start planning for an intervention. The goal is to have programs that better support people and newcomers who are living with HIV in Canada.”

What's next: NewHITES’s next project will focus on designated panel physicians overseas who conduct mandatory HIV testing during the Canadian immigration medical exams.