       Document 0833
 DOCN  M9460833
 TI    The invisible women: caregiving and the construction of AIDS health
       services.
 DT    9404
 AU    Schiller NG; Department of Anthropology, University of New Hampshire,
       Durham; 03833.
 SO    Cult Med Psychiatry. 1993 Dec;17(4):487-512. Unique Identifier :
       AIDSLINE MED/94155611
 AB    In health services research about the utilization by and financing of
       health services for people with AIDS, women kin as caregivers virtually
       disappear and the sacrifices made by women kin become socially
       invisible. Any role that women play is subsumed under the rubric
       community care. The health services perspective is contrasted with the
       lived realities of caregiving by women kin as documented in data from a
       needs assessment of people with AIDS which the New Jersey Department of
       Health commissioned and then disregarded. The disregarding of women's
       caregiving is part of larger hegemonic processes that maintain concealed
       structures of domination.
 DE    Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/ECONOMICS/*PSYCHOLOGY  Activities of
       Daily Living/PSYCHOLOGY  Adolescence  Adult  Caregivers/*PSYCHOLOGY
       Case Report  Cost of Illness  Cost Control/TRENDS  Family/PSYCHOLOGY
       Female  *Gender Identity  Health Policy/ECONOMICS  Health Services
       Research  Home Care Services/ECONOMICS  Home
       Nursing/ECONOMICS/*PSYCHOLOGY  Hospitalization/ECONOMICS  Human  Male
       Middle Age  New Jersey  Poverty/*PSYCHOLOGY  Public Assistance/ECONOMICS
       Social Dominance  Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.  JOURNAL ARTICLE

       SOURCE: National Library of Medicine.  NOTICE: This material may be
       protected by Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.Code).

