| Literature DB >> 24205346 |
Judith Tedlie Moskowitz1, Judith Wrubel, Jen R Hult, Stephanie Maurer, Michael Acree.
Abstract
Illness appraisals provide important context to help understand the way individuals cope with chronic illness. In the present study, a qualitative approach to the analysis of HIV diagnosis experience narratives in a sample of 100 people newly diagnosed with HIV revealed five groups that differed in their initial illness appraisals: HIV as Chronic Illness, Concern about Dying, Stigmatization, Threat to Identity, and Other Threats Overshadow HIV. When compared on quantitatively measured depressive mood, the groups differed on level and trajectory over the course of the first year post-diagnosis. Although the experience of living with HIV has changed significantly with the advent of effective Antiretroviral Therapies (ART), there were a number of similarities between the appraisals of this group of participants who were diagnosed post ART and groups who were diagnosed before ART became widely available. Posttest counselors and other HIV service providers should take individual differences in illness appraisals into account in order to help newly HIV-positive clients manage their healthcare and cope adaptively with their diagnosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24205346 PMCID: PMC3808295 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0078904
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Most frequent stressful event challenge/threat codes.
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| SELF VIEW | How they see themselves in regards to getting HIV or being someone with HIV. | “I just couldn’t believe it… ’cause I never thought that I’d be HIV-positive.” | 42 |
| OWN DEATH | Participant's concern about his/her own death. | “…but the time is going to come when I’m gonna die anyway.” | 34 |
| HEALTH CONCERN | Participant's concern for his/her own health. | “I’m still deciding whether to take a certain medication…there’s some stress around it…because it’s toxic...” | 32 32 |
| STIGMA | Concern over discrimination or feelings of stigmatization. | “a couple people know, but I don’t want to tell my friends because I feel really shameful that… that here I am HIV positive… and the stigma of that…” | 31 |
| DISCLOSURE | Concerns over disclosing, including not wanting to worry others. | “…there’s people in our lives we care about…I had to tell them about it…and it wasn’t so much for me, but I had to like, to like, watch them react.” | 29 |
| FUTURE HEALTH | Concern over own future health. Can be positive or negative outlook but wanting to stay healthy. | “Now he brought me this shit and I don’t like it. Now I’ve got to deal with it for the rest of my life.” | 20 |
| SOCIAL SUPPORT | Concern about social support, including support by partner and potential loss of support. | “…it’s just strange since I can’t get any support from him right now…so that’s frustrating.” | 19 |
| FUTURE PLAN | Concern about possible future plans. | “you know, what about these plans I had for my life, things I wanted to do…was it all for nothing?” | 17 |
| NOT INFECT OTHER | Not wanting to infect other people with HIV | “I couldn’t think about anything else but that because I was afraid that my partner was infected…” | 12 |
| APPEARANCE | Concern about personal attractiveness | “I don't want to look - not that I think I'm a supermodel now, but you know, definitely not that, you know, right now” | 11 |
| SOBRIETY | Desire to stay sober/drug free | “…because nothing’s more important to me than staying sober and keeping that creeping crystal meth outta my life…” | 11 |
Note: Frequency is number of participants (of 100) who noted the stake in their diagnosis narrative. A participant could have multiple challenge/threat appraisals coded in their narrative.
Descriptives by group.
| HIV as chronic illness (N=24) | Concern about dying (N=23) | Stigmatization (N=20) | Threat to Identity (N=19) | Other Threats overshadow diagnosis (N = 14) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Race/Ethnicity | |||||
| White | 50 | 42.9 | 63.2 | 28.8 | 69.2 |
| African American | 25 | 38.1 | 31.6 | 11.8 | 23.8 |
| Latino | 16.7 | 9.5 | 5.2 | 23.5 | 0 |
| Other | 8.3 | 9.5 | 0 | 5.9 | 7.7 |
| Age | 41.9b | 39.1b | 35.5b | 37.8b | 43.4a |
| Education (years) | 12 | 11.9 | 11.6 | 11.6 | 11.7 |
| Sexual Orientation (% identifying as gay or bisexual) | 96% | 74% | 90% | 89% | 78% |
| CD4 at entry into study | 424b | 445b | 642a | 440b | 376b |
Note: cells with different superscripts differ significantly from each other
Figure 1CES-D Score at each interview by HIV illness appraisal group.