52 research outputs found
Mediator and Moderator Effects on the Relationship Between HIV-positive Status Disclosure Concerns and Health-related Quality of Life
HIV-related stigma and the effect on quality of life is an on-going public health concern despite decades of education, prevention, and intervention efforts. The main purposes of this study were to examine the mediating role of four coping styles and the moderating role of gender on the relationship between HIV-positive status disclosure concerns and eight health-related quality of life outcomes. Data were collected from 346 women and men living with HIV. Results indicated that two coping styles – acquiring social support and positive reframing – mediated the negative relationship between disclosure concerns and health-related quality of life outcomes. There was no support for a moderated mediation. Interventions aimed at helping people living with HIV should focus on identifying and acquiring coping styles that transform perceptions of HIV-related stigma to support disclosure and improve health-related quality of life
Assessment of HIV Disclosure and Sexual Behavior Among Black Men Who Have Sex With Men Following a Randomized Controlled Intervention
Disclosure is important in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission risk reduction. This randomized controlled intervention assessed changes in and predictors of disclosure and risky sexual behavior among Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) living with HIV in the U.S. BMSM were randomly assigned to either the disclosure intervention or attention control case management group. Predictors of three disclosure types (behavior, beliefs, intentions) and condomless anal intercourse (CAI) included disclosure consequences (rewards and costs), disclosure readiness, and safer sex readiness. Mixed-effect results showed no differences between the groups in any of the outcomes; although disclosure behavior increased over time. Relationships were found between readiness to change and CAI; disclosure consequences and different disclosure types; and disclosure behavior and receptive CAI. When working with BMSM living with HIV, practitioners and prevention specialists should consider the importance of disclosure pertaining to receptive CAI and factors that support overall disclosure and safer sex
Ways of Coping and HIV Disclosure Among People Living with HIV: Mediation of Decision Self-efficacy and Moderation by Sex
Individuals living with HIV/AIDS face several stressors and use varying strategies to cope. Disclosure (or nondisclosure) of HIV serostatus is an important consideration among individuals living with HIV. However, studies examining the association between coping and HIV disclosure are lacking, and more research examining potential mediators and moderators is needed. The transactional model of stress and coping and the theory of planned behavior may help in understanding the mediating relationship between coping, decision self-efficacy, and HIV disclosure. Therefore, the aims of this study were to examine the association between coping and HIV disclosure to sexual partners, assess the mediating role of decision self-efficacy, and examine moderation by sex. Baseline data from 262 individuals living with HIV who participated in a disclosure intervention were used for analysis. Descriptive statistics were used to assess sociodemographic characteristics. Principal component analysis was used to operationalize coping. Path analysis was then used to determine the mediating role of decision self-efficacy in the association between overall, adaptive, distancing, and attack/escape avoidance coping and HIV disclosure to sexual partners. After adjusting for age and time since diagnosis, direct associations between coping and decision self-efficacy, and decision self-efficacy and disclosure behavior varied by sex. Among the overall study population, decision self-efficacy mediated the associations between adaptive coping (β = 0.064, p = 0.003), attack/escape avoidance coping (β = −0.052, p = 0.009) and disclosure behavior. Disclosure intervention programs geared towards populations living with HIV should include decision self-efficacy and adaptive coping, and attenuate attack/escape avoidance coping
Age and Racial Disparities in Substance Use and Self-Reported Viral Suppression among Men who have Sex with Men with HIV
HIV disproportionately affects men who have sex with men (MSM). Substance use is common among people living with HIV and may affect antiretroviral therapy adherence. Nevertheless, research examining the association between substance use and viral suppression is lacking. The aims of this study were to determine the association between substance use and self-reported viral suppression, and by age and race among MSM living with HIV. Data were obtained from 309 HIV-positive MSM. Logistic regression was used to determine the association between substance use and self-reported viral suppression at baseline, and by age and race. Approximately 67% of participants reported they were virally suppressed. After adjusting for sociodemographics, every increase in substance use score was associated with a 7% decrease in the odds of reporting viral suppression (odds ratio [OR]: 0.93; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.89–0.98; p = 0.003). The negative association between substance use and self-reported viral suppression remained statistically significant among MSM aged 25–34 years (OR = 0.89; 95% CI: 0.79–1.00; p = 0.041) and statistically significant for Black MSM (OR = 0.92; 95% CI: 0.86–0.98; p = 0.009). Intervention programs for MSM living with HIV aimed at improving viral suppression should address substance use and consider the differences by age and race
Assessment of HIV Disclosure and Sexual Behavior Among Black Men Who Have Sex With Men Following a Randomized Controlled Intervention
Disclosure is important in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission risk reduction. This randomized controlled intervention assessed changes in and predictors of disclosure and risky sexual behavior among Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) living with HIV in the U.S. BMSM were randomly assigned to either the disclosure intervention or attention control case management group. Predictors of three disclosure types (behavior, beliefs, intentions) and condomless anal intercourse (CAI) included disclosure consequences (rewards and costs), disclosure readiness, and safer sex readiness. Mixed-effect results showed no differences between the groups in any of the outcomes; although disclosure behavior increased over time. Relationships were found between readiness to change and CAI; disclosure consequences and different disclosure types; and disclosure behavior and receptive CAI. When working with BMSM living with HIV, practitioners and prevention specialists should consider the importance of disclosure pertaining to receptive CAI and factors that support overall disclosure and safer sex
Mediator and Moderator Effects on the Relationship Between HIV-positive Status Disclosure Concerns and Health-related Quality of Life
HIV-related stigma and the effect on quality of life is an on-going public health concern despite decades of education, prevention, and intervention efforts. The main purposes of this study were to examine the mediating role of four coping styles and the moderating role of gender on the relationship between HIV-positive status disclosure concerns and eight health-related quality of life outcomes. Data were collected from 346 women and men living with HIV. Results indicated that two coping styles – acquiring social support and positive reframing – mediated the negative relationship between disclosure concerns and health-related quality of life outcomes. There was no support for a moderated mediation. Interventions aimed at helping people living with HIV should focus on identifying and acquiring coping styles that transform perceptions of HIV-related stigma to support disclosure and improve health-related quality of life
Ways of Coping and HIV Disclosure Among People Living with HIV: Mediation of Decision Self-efficacy and Moderation by Sex
Individuals living with HIV/AIDS face several stressors and use varying strategies to cope. Disclosure (or nondisclosure) of HIV serostatus is an important consideration among individuals living with HIV. However, studies examining the association between coping and HIV disclosure are lacking, and more research examining potential mediators and moderators is needed. The transactional model of stress and coping and the theory of planned behavior may help in understanding the mediating relationship between coping, decision self-efficacy, and HIV disclosure. Therefore, the aims of this study were to examine the association between coping and HIV disclosure to sexual partners, assess the mediating role of decision self-efficacy, and examine moderation by sex. Baseline data from 262 individuals living with HIV who participated in a disclosure intervention were used for analysis. Descriptive statistics were used to assess sociodemographic characteristics. Principal component analysis was used to operationalize coping. Path analysis was then used to determine the mediating role of decision self-efficacy in the association between overall, adaptive, distancing, and attack/escape avoidance coping and HIV disclosure to sexual partners. After adjusting for age and time since diagnosis, direct associations between coping and decision self-efficacy, and decision self-efficacy and disclosure behavior varied by sex. Among the overall study population, decision self-efficacy mediated the associations between adaptive coping (β = 0.064, p = 0.003), attack/escape avoidance coping (β = −0.052, p = 0.009) and disclosure behavior. Disclosure intervention programs geared towards populations living with HIV should include decision self-efficacy and adaptive coping, and attenuate attack/escape avoidance coping
- …