Stigma against people with HIV or AIDS has decreased substantially since the disease’s recognition in 1981, PRRI’s new Graphic of the Week confirms substantial changes in opinion about the disease over the last couple decades. The
Although majorities of all religious groups disagree with the idea that AIDS might be God’s punishment for immoral sexual behavior, there are notable differences between religious groups. Nearly one-quarter of white evangelical Protestants (24 percent) and Hispanic Protestants (24 percent) along with 1-in-5 (20 percent) black Protestants, believe that AIDS might be God’s punishment for immoral sexual behavior. In contrast, about 1-in-10 white mainline Protestants (10 percent), Catholics (11 percent) and religiously unaffiliated Americans (8 percent) agree that AIDS might be a form of divine retribution. Hispanic Catholics are three times more likely to believe this than white Catholics (21 percent vs. 7 percent).
Despite these dramatic shifts, most Americans still believe that people who are infected in the U.S. are themselves to blame. Nearly two-thirds (65 percent) of Americans say that people with HIV/AIDS in the United States became infected because of irresponsible personal behavior. In contrast, only 4-in-10 (41 percent) Americans believe that people who contracted HIV in the developing world did so because of irresponsible behavior, while nearly half (48 percent) say they contracted the disease through no fault of their own.
Most Americans also believe that Americans with HIV/AIDS face significant discrimination in society. A majority (53 percent) of Americans still believe that people with HIV or AIDS face a lot of discrimination in the United States.