Cite
"It's Better If I Die Because Even in the Hospital, There is a Stigma, People Still Gossip": Gossip as a Culturally Shaped Labeling Process and Its Implications for HIV-Related Stigma in Botswana.
MLA
Poku, Ohemaa B., et al. “‘It’s Better If I Die Because Even in the Hospital, There Is a Stigma, People Still Gossip’: Gossip as a Culturally Shaped Labeling Process and Its Implications for HIV-Related Stigma in Botswana.” AIDS & Behavior, vol. 27, no. 8, Aug. 2023, pp. 2535–47. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-023-03980-x.
APA
Poku, O. B., Eschliman, E. L., Entaile, P., Rampa, S., Mehta, H., Tal, D., Silvert, L., Li, T., Becker, T. D., Govindasamy, D., Stockton, M. A., Adedimeji, A., Ho-Foster, A., Blank, M. B., Dangerfield II, D. T., Yang, L. H., & Murray, S. M. (2023). “It’s Better If I Die Because Even in the Hospital, There is a Stigma, People Still Gossip”: Gossip as a Culturally Shaped Labeling Process and Its Implications for HIV-Related Stigma in Botswana. AIDS & Behavior, 27(8), 2535–2547. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-023-03980-x
Chicago
Poku, Ohemaa B., Evan L. Eschliman, Patlo Entaile, Shathani Rampa, Haitisha Mehta, Danielle Tal, Lea Silvert, et al. 2023. “‘It’s Better If I Die Because Even in the Hospital, There Is a Stigma, People Still Gossip’: Gossip as a Culturally Shaped Labeling Process and Its Implications for HIV-Related Stigma in Botswana.” AIDS & Behavior 27 (8): 2535–47. doi:10.1007/s10461-023-03980-x.