| Literature DB >> 18834538 |
Kelly K O'Brien1, Ahmed M Bayoumi, Carol Strike, Nancy L Young, Aileen M Davis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since the advent of combination antiretroviral therapy, in developed countries HIV increasingly is perceived as a long-term illness. Individuals may experience health-related consequences of HIV and its associated treatments, a concept that may be termed disability. To date, a comprehensive framework for understanding the health-related consequences experienced by people living with HIV has not been developed. The purpose of this research was to develop a conceptual framework of disability from the perspective of adults living with HIV.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18834538 PMCID: PMC2572592 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7525-6-76
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Characteristics of Focus Group and Interview Participants (n = 38)
| Male | 21 (55%) |
| Female | 16 (42%) |
| Transgendered | 1 (3%) |
| Age | 41 years old (range: 27–58 years) |
| Identified with particular ethnic group | 23 (60%)** |
| Nadir CD4 count < 200 cells/mm3 | 19 (50%) |
| Diagnosed Prior to 1996 | 17 (45%) |
| Experienced an HIV-related illness | 11 (73%)*† |
| Currently Taking HIV Medications | 25 (66%) |
| Currently Working | 6 (40%)* (3 full-time, 3 part-time) |
| Poor | 0 (0%) |
| Fair | 2 (5%) |
| Good | 16 (42%) |
| Very Good | 15 (39%) |
| Excellent | 5 (14%) |
| Median Number of Symptoms Present | 15/20 (IQR: 8–18) |
| Median Number of Bothersome Symptoms | 13/20 (IQR: 8–18)^ |
*denominator of 15 interview participants only
**13 identified themselves as African/African Caribbean/Black African/Black; 2 Jewish; 1 West Indian; 1 Latin; 1 Italian Canadian; 1 Irish Canadian; 1 French Italian; 1 English British; 1 White Caucasian; 1 not specified.
†most common HIV-related illness included pneumonia/lung infection/PCP pneumonia (n = 6 participants).
^Most bothersome symptoms included fatigue or loss of energy, feeling sad, down or depressed, and feeling nervous or anxious.
IQR = interquartile range
Figure 1Episodic Disability Framework: An example of a person's disability experience illustrating the episodic nature of disability that occurs on a daily basis and over the entire course of living with HIV. Episodes of disability may be triggered by life events (brown), and exacerbated or alleviated by extrinsic contextual factors (green) and intrinsic contextual factors (pink).
Figure 2Dimensions of Episodic Disability: Four dimensions of episodic disability and their sub-components that may be experienced by adults living with HIV.
Figure 3Potential Linkages Between Dimensions of Disability: Symptoms and impairments, difficulties with day-to-day activities, challenges to social inclusion and uncertainty appeared to be linked; meaning a change in one dimension was associated with a change in the other.
Figure 4Contextual Factors of Disability: Factors that describe the context in which disability is experienced. Extrinsic and intrinsic contextual factors could exacerbate or alleviate episodes of disability for adults living with HIV.
Examples of Triggers of Disability
| Receiving news of an HIV diagnosis marked a severe episode of disability. Participants reflected how this one-time episode was a life-changing event that initiated life with HIV and its uncertainty. |
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| Participants described the complexity of weighing the physiological benefits of medications with the potential adverse effects. Some were fearful of how they might react to antiretrovirals, specifically the physical effects that could result, identifying them as HIV-positive, and making them vulnerable to stigma and discrimination: |
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| These included illnesses related to HIV or co-morbidities participants were living with prior to being diagnosed with HIV. Examples included osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, Hepatitis-C co-infection, lipodystrophy, diabetes, stroke, myocardial infection, and pneumonia. |
| Losing a family member, friend, or partner (regardless of whether attributed to HIV) sparked uncertainty as participants began worrying about their own health and survival. |
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