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Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC
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Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa

S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS

Global Health Bureau

USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC

Page 2: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Definition of Multigenerational Trauma: Trauma passed from one generation to the next, either directly or indirectly

One type

Historical Trauma – A cumulative emotional and psychological wounding emanating from deliberately perpetrated massive group trauma experience, that becomes culturalized and passed down to successive generations

Page 3: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Historical Trauma Theory builds upon…Four theoretical frames -• Psychological/psychoanalytic• Political/economic • Social/ecological • Anthropological

Studies of several ‘traumatized’ populations -• 1960s - Holocaust survivors and families • 1980s - American Indian groups (healing ‘soul wounds’)• 1990s - African Americans (Post Traumatic Slavery Syndrome)• More recent - Palestinians, Russians, Cambodians

Page 4: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Major premise of the theory:

Populations historically subjected to mass trauma - colonialism, slavery, war, genocide, apartheid(?) - are prone to develop maladaptive social, behavioral and dispositional patterns that are transmitted as learned behavior from generation to generation.

Page 5: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Complex of symptoms:

• chronic alcohol use/abuse• distrust of others, including intimates• high levels of violence, GBV, IPV• ‘vacant’ esteem (helplessness, depression,

victimhood)• poor parenting• sense of resignation, fatalism• search for instant gratification, frequent partner

change

Page 6: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Southern Africa

has amongst the

world’s highest

rates of

• Violence• Sexual abuse/

violation of children• GBV, IPV• Alcohol use/abuse• Youth hopelessness/

suicidal thoughts• Elderly abuse

Page 7: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Is the region suffering from a form of historical, multigenerational trauma?

Are the resulting behavioral and dispositional patterns catalyzing transmission of HIV and impeding all attempts to address the epidemic?

Yes

Page 8: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Relevance of the Theory to HIV

1. It is a new paradigm that links the past to present & helps explain high HIV prevalence.

2. It demands social/collective approaches to re-build the capacity of communities to sustain protective practices – collective efficacy or communal healing.

3. It alerts us to the fact that the creation of an ‘AIDS-free generation‘ is a multi-layered social project – breaking the trauma cycle.

Page 9: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

A Theory-in-Progress

Validating construct requires more empirical research

• To identify specific mechanisms of trans-generational transmission (i.e. ‘carrier groups’ and systematic oppression as ‘composite shocks’)

• To link measures of historical mutigenerational trauma to health outcomes

• To investigate mass trauma manifestations in different populations

Page 10: Multigenerational Trauma and HIV in Southern Africa S. Leclerc-Madlala Office of HIV/AIDS Global Health Bureau USAID AIDS2012, July 22-27, Washington DC.

Historical Multigenerational Trauma Theory:

A compelling, relevant theoretical framework to help the HIV community gain a broader and deeper perspective

of the disease & conceptualize new approaches for solutions.

“Medicines can never heal a soul wound”

- Dr. Maria Yellow Horse Braveheart, University of Nevada