| Literature DB >> 24242258 |
Ingrid T Katz1, Annemarie E Ryu, Afiachukwu G Onuegbu, Christina Psaros, Sheri D Weiser, David R Bangsberg, Alexander C Tsai.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Adherence to HIV antiretroviral therapy (ART) is a critical determinant of HIV-1 RNA viral suppression and health outcomes. It is generally accepted that HIV-related stigma is correlated with factors that may undermine ART adherence, but its relationship with ART adherence itself is not well established. We therefore undertook this review to systematically assess the relationship between HIV-related stigma and ART adherence.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; adherence; disclosure; poverty; social support; stigma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24242258 PMCID: PMC3833107 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.16.3.18640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Figure 1Flow diagram. We identified 14,854 records by searching nine electronic databases, yielding 34 qualitative studies and 41 quantitative studies.
Qualitative studies on stigma, disclosure and ART adherence (N=34)
| Third-order labels | Third-order constructs | Second-order constructs | Summary definition | First-order constructs | Source(s) |
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| Social support | Intimate and familial relationships | Spousal, peer and familial support | Participants discussed support from spouses, peers and family as critical for overcoming stigma and maintaining adherence, as was having a sense of obligation to family |
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| Context of male-dominated household decision-making | In cultures where men are typically heads of their households, women fear disclosing their serostatus as they fear social isolation and abandonment. Women may choose to have providers give the test information to their husbands by bringing them in for testing. In addition, in some cultures, women cannot travel alone to clinic to pick up their medications. |
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| Healthy children reducing stigma | Clinical response to ART in children of HIV-positive mothers reduces stigma and often re-establishes mother's role in family |
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| Compromised relationships | Physical manifestations of HIV and AIDS leads to social isolation | Physical signs of ill health may lead to abandonment or to the belief that the HIV-positive person is already dead |
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| Complex regimens with large numbers of medications | Complex regimens characterized by a large pill burden that required undesired disclosure in order to adhere |
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| Social rejection | Participants adopted strategies of concealment because they feared ridicule or discrimination if they disclosed their HIV status or if they were seen taking their medications |
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| Treatment side-effects | Observable side-effects of medications (e.g., dysmorphic body changes) carried stigma |
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| Negotiating disclosure to a child | Stigma associated with a child's HIV status | Maternal shame and stigma related to perinatal acquisition of HIV kept them from informing HIV-positive children about their seropositivity, with attendant challenges in ART adherence |
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| Self-Identity | Race/minority status | Outsider status based on race | HIV-positive persons who belonged to racial minority groups felt further stigmatized and socially isolated |
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| Sexual orientation/relationship status | Impact of social norms on stigma and willingness to disclose | Social norms further stigmatized HIV-positive persons if the mode of acquisition was not regarded as socially acceptable behavior |
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| Substance abuse | Social marginalization of injection drug use intensified for HIV-positive users | Participants who actively used illicit substances discussed being unable to establish relationships with HIV-negative persons or non-injection drug users, and feeling socially isolated |
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| Redefining healthy living | Self-perception as pro-active/choosing to be healthy | Participants described knowing friends who died from AIDS and not wanting to be like them; the notion of “choosing to live” [ |
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| Acceptance of status | Self-identifying as someone who is HIV-positive | Participants who had accepted their status found it easier to adhere vs. those who had difficulty taking medications because it reminded them of their seropositivity |
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| Poverty | Economic implications of HIV | Mutually reinforcing relationship between poverty and stigma | HIV-related illness and perceived economic inadequacy leading to social exclusion |
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| Economic insecurity resulting from HIV-related stigma | “I thought that people would know my HIV status when I have illnesses regularly and am out of the office several times.” [ |
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| Costs associated with treatment | Costs associated with purchasing medications or with travel to the treatment centre (along with loss of wages) made even free ART prohibitively expensive for some, leading to treatment interruptions |
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| Coping | Maladaptive strategies | Anger at diagnosis | Inability to accept diagnosis and anger at diagnosis, with associated inability to engage in HIV care and adhere to ART |
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| Substance use and abuse | Consumption of alcohol and use of drugs provided a temporary refuge but also made ART adherence more difficult | … |
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| Fear that drugs are dangerous and/or that HIV is a curse fuelled by stigma | Participants expressed concerns about taking medications feared to be dangerous or toxic |
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| Acceptance | Knowledge that taking medications will provide benefits | Acceptance of the diagnosis counter-balanced stigma, as participants described moving on a continuum from willingness to take medications, to engagement in pro-active healthy lifestyle changes |
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| Mental wellbeing | Treatment of depression and anxiety related to diagnosis | Treatment of depression resulting from HIV diagnosis could ameliorate stigma and social isolation |
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| Morality and spirituality | Notion of God's will | Participants discussed relinquishing control of their lives to God and putting their faith in a higher power to help them overcome adversity |
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| Health systems | Importance placed in clinical support staff | Nursing and physician support to gain trust and overcome social isolation associated with stigma | Programs supporting social support and building trust with the adherence nurse or doctor were described as essential for people who reported stigma as a barrier to ART adherence |
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| Support in designing tolerable combination of medications that are easily available | Participants felt it was easiest to adhere if they were on tolerable medications and if providers were available in the event of adverse side effects vs. those who feared taking medications because of potential side effects or complications. It was also important to ensure that there were no stock-outs and that medications were easily available. |
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| Family-driven treatment | Establishing treatment for all members of the household | Treatment to all HIV-positive members of a family (including spouse and children) provided support to overcome stigma and improve medication adherence |
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Figure 2Reciprocal relationships between poverty and stigma. HIV-associated illness reinforces the perceived economic inadequacy of HIV-positive persons, who are excluded from networks of mutual aid. Stigmatized persons are excluded from the community, undermining their social support and worsening economic insecurity.
Studies reporting a quantitative measure of association between stigma or disclosure and ART adherence (N=41)
| Citation | Study design and population | Study period | Primary stigma or disclosure measure | Primary adherence measure | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Birbeck | Cross-sectional study of 255 outpatients from 3 clinics in rural Zambia | 2005–06 | Disclosure of HIV seropositivity to spouse, family, friend, or no one | “Good adherence” was defined as (a) attendance at all ART clinic visits, (b) no lapse in drug collection, and (c) no clinic documentation indicating adherence problems | Of those who had not disclosed to anyone, only 17% had good adherence, whereas 50–66% of those who had disclosed to a spouse, family member or friend had good adherence ( |
| Adeyemi | Cross-sectional study of 320 outpatients on ART for at least 12 months, recruited in 2 cities in Nigeria | 2009 | Unclear measure (“stigma and discrimination”) | Greater than one week delay in ART refill, as determined by comparison of date of scheduled appointment and date of actual refill | “Stigma and discrimination” was associated with increased odds of delayed ART refill (AOR=1.4; 95% CI=1.1–1.7), after adjusting for distance to clinic and occupation |
| Boyer | Cross-sectional study of 2381 inpatients in 27 national, provincial and district hospitals throughout Cameroon | 2006–07 | Personal experience of HIV-related stigma from partner or close family members | Self-reported ART adherence based on a 14-item scale related to dose-taking and dosing schedule [ | Experience of discriminatory behaviours was associated with increased odds of non-adherence (AOR=1.74, 95% CI=1.14–2.65), after adjusting for household income, binge drinking, food insecurity, social support and healthcare supply-related factors |
| Cardarelli | Cross-sectional study of 103 outpatients at a preventive medicine clinic for low-income persons in Texas | 2008 | 40-item HIV stigma scale [ | Non-adherence was defined as a positive screen on the simplified medication adherence questionnaire, a modified version of the Morisky scale, which contains 6 items related to forgetfulness or carelessness about ART dose taking behavior [ | The stigma score did not have a statistically significant association with non-adherence (AOR=1.01; 95% CI=0.98–1.03), after adjusting for race, education, racial discrimination, social support, perceived stress or sense of control |
| Carlucci | Cross-sectional study of 424 outpatients at a mission hospital in rural Zambia | 2006 | Single-item question about perceived stigma | Pill count adherence measured over a median of 84 days (interquartile range, 56–98 days), with optimal adherence defined as≥95% doses taken | Perceived stigma did not have a statistically significant association with adherence (AOR=1.1; 95% CI=0.55-2.1), after adjusting for travel time and transportation cost |
| Charurat | Cross-sectional study of 5760 persons initiating ART at five university teaching hospitals in urban Nigeria | 2005–06 | HIV disclosure to spouse or family members | Pharmacy refill adherence rate (days of medication dispensed divided by days between visits), with poor refill adherence defined as<95% adherence | Disclosure was associated with decreased odds of low adherence (AOR=0.85; 95% CI=0.75–0.97), after adjusting for education, employment, distance to clinic |
| and time on ART. There was no univariable association with loss to follow up (OR=0.96; 95% CI=0.82–1.12) | |||||
| Colbert [ | Cross-sectional analysis of baseline data on 335 persons participating in a 5-year randomized clinical trial conducted in clinics and HIV service organizations in western Pennsylvania and northeast Ohio | 2003–07 | 40-item HIV stigma scale [ | 30-day adherence as measured with electronic event monitoring, with poor adherence defined as<85% adherence | Neither personalized stigma (AOR=0.98; 95% CI=0.95-1.02) nor negative self-image (AOR=1.00; 95% CI=0.94–1.06) had a statistically significant association with poor adherence, after adjusting for mental health, self-efficacy and health literacy |
| Diiorio | Cross sectional study of 236 outpatients (32% women) from an HIV clinic in Atlanta | 2001–03 | Four items related to internalized stigma from the Perceived Stigma of HIV and AIDS Scale [ | Five items related to logistical adherence barriers from the ACTG Adherence Instrument [ | In a structural equation model, stigma had an indirect negative association with adherence: stigma was found to erode self-efficacy, which in turn was directly associated with adherence |
| Dlamini | Longitudinal study of 698 persons (72.3% on ART for more than 1 year) enrolled in a larger cohort in Lesotho, Malawi, South Africa, Swaziland and Tanzania | 2006–07 | 33-item HIV and AIDS Stigma Instrument-PLWA [ | ACTG Adherence Instrument [ | Persons who did not report any missing doses experienced a steeper decline in mean stigma over time, after adjusting for education, employment, food insecurity, social support and years since diagnosis |
| Do | Cross-sectional study of 300 outpatients from the largest ART clinic in Botswana | 2005 | Disclosure of seropositivity to a partner | Adherence defined as no missed doses with four-day and one-month recall, and no missed refill visits with 90-day recall | Non-disclosure was associated with an increased odds of non-adherence ( |
| Franke | 2-year longitudinal study of 134 adults initiating ART in urban Peru | 2005–09 | 40-item HIV stigma scale [ | 30-day self-report, with “suboptimal” adherence defined as<95% [ | On univariable analysis, perceived HIV stigma was not associated with suboptimal adherence (OR=1.03, 95% CI 0.94–1.12) and was not included in the final multivariable model |
| Goldman | Longitudinal study of 913 treatment-naïve adults initiating ART in urban Zambia | 2006–07 | Disclosure of HIV status to partner or spouse | Medication possession ratio based on cumulative days late for pharmacy refill visits, with≥95% defined as optimal adherence | Disclosure did not have a statistically significant association with optimal adherence (estimates not reported) |
| Kalichman | Cross-sectional study of 81 adults recruited from HIV clinical and community support services in Atlanta | 2005 | 4-item self-efficacy for disclosure decisions scale | 6-item standard medication adherence self-efficacy scale [ | Self-efficacy for disclosure had a statistically significant correlation with self-efficacy for engaging in care ( |
| Kalichman | Cross-sectional study of 145 adults recruited from HIV clinical and community support services in Atlanta | 2008 | 6-item Internalized AIDS-Related Stigma Scale [ | Monthly unannounced pill count conducted by telephone, averaged over four months, with adherence defined as ≥85% of doses taken | Internalized stigma had no statistically significant association with adherence (AOR=0.99, 95% CI 0.87–1.13) |
| Li | Cross-sectional study of 386 adults (23.9% of whom were treatment-naïve), recruited from four district hospitals throughout Thailand | 2007 | 8-item scale assessing serostatus disclosure to various social ties [ | 30-day self-reported adherence, with good adherence defined as no missed doses | Good adherence had a statistically significant association with disclosure (AOR=1.70; 95% CI=1.07–2.70) but not internalized stigma (AOR=0.83; 95% CI=0.51–1.36), after adjusting for education, employment, instrumental social support, depression symptom severity, family functioning and years since diagnosis |
| Li | Cross-sectional study of 202 outpatients enrolled in the Chinese national free ART program, selected from six HIV treatment sites in Hunan Province, China | 2009 | 34-item, five-factor HIV-related stigma scale [ | Seven-day self-reported ART adherence as measured on a 5-point Likert scale [ | Stigma was associated with a reduced odds of good adherence (AOR=0.96; 95% CI=0.93–0.98), after adjusting for education, family income, years since diagnosis and recent drug use |
| Lucero | Cross-sectional study of 65 persons aged >50 years recruited from two hospitals in New York City | 2001 | Disclosure of HIV seropositivity to family and friends | Self-report, rated on a 4-point Likert-type scale, with good adherence defined as “taking medication all of the time” | Disclosure was associated with better adherence (estimates not shown) |
| Martinez | Longitudinal study of 178 girls and women aged 15-24 years recruited from 5 cities throughout the U.S. | 2003–05 | The disclosure concerns and negative self-image subscales of the HIV stigma scale [ | 12-item scale to measure self-reported dosing and scheduling adherence with a two-day recall | Baseline stigma did not have a statistically significant association with complete adherence at 12-month follow-up ( |
| Mo and Mak [ | Cross-sectional study of 102 adults recruited from an outpatient clinic in Hong Kong | 2009 | 22-item self-stigma scale [ | ACTG Adherence Instrument [ | Intentional non-adherers had greater self-stigma (4.11, SD 0.74) than adherers (3.78, SD 0.96) and unintentional non-adherers (3.22, SD 0.92) F[1,100]=7.58, |
| Molassiotis | Cross sectional study of 136 adults recruited from an outpatient clinic in Hong Kong | 2002 | HIV disclosure to others, including spouses or partners | ACTG Adherence Instrument [ | Disclosure did not have a statistically significant association with adherence (estimates not shown) |
| Muyingo | Secondary analysis of data from a randomized trial of 2957 treatment-naïve adults initiating ART at two treatment centres in Uganda and one in Zimbabwe | 2003–04 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus | Drug possession ratio, with complete adherence defined as 100% adherence | Disclosure did not have a statistically significant association with complete adherence (estimates not shown), after adjusting for education and duration of current partnership |
| Nachega | Cross-sectional study of 66 outpatients at an HIV clinic in South Africa | 2002 | Fear of stigma from partner | ACTG Adherence Instrument [ | On univariable analysis, fear of stigma from partner was associated with reduced odds of >95% adherence (OR=0.13; 95% CI=0.02–0.70) |
| Olowookere | Cross sectional study of 318 adults on ART for at least three months, recruited from a university hospital HIV clinic in Nigeria | 2007 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus | Seven-day self-reported adherence, with non-adherence defined as<95% doses taken | Non-disclosure was associated with increased odds of non-adherence (AOR=1.7; 95% CI=1.0–2.8), after adjusting for transportation costs |
| Peltzer | Cross-sectional study of 735 adults newly initiating ART at one of 3 public hospitals in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa | 2007–08 | 7-item version of the AIDS-Related Stigma Scale [ | ACTG Adherence Instrument [ | Partial or full VAS adherence was associated with AIDS-related discrimination (AOR=0.60; 95% CI=0.46–0.78) but not internalized stigma (OR=1.11; 95% CI=0.97–1.27), after adjusting for alcohol use and social support; use of the ACTG Adherence Instrument yielded similar results |
| Penniman [ | Secondary analysis of baseline data on 259 women enrolled in a larger cohort study in Los Angeles | 2005–06 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus to child | 3-item self-reported dose-taking and timing adherence with two-day recall | Non-disclosure was associated with reduced odds of adherence (AOR=0.46; 95% CI=0.24–0.88), after adjusting for stress, family functioning and depression symptom severity |
| Peretti-Watel | Cross-sectional study of 2932 adults recruited from 102 hospitals in France | 2003 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus to friends and family; HIV-related discrimination by friends or family | Self-reported measure based on dose and timing adherence with one-week recall, with “high adherence” defined as no doses missed or mistimed | Poor adherence was associated with HIV-related discrimination (AOR=1.68; 95% CI=1.00–2.82) but not selective disclosure to significant others (AOR=0.73; 95% CI=0.28–1.94), after adjustment for alcohol and drug use |
| Rao | Cross-sectional study of 720 outpatients from a university HIV clinic in Seattle | 2009 | Summated rating scale of 4 items related to internalized and enacted stigma, from the 24-item Stigma Scale for Chronic Illness [ | 3 items from the ACTG Adherence Instrument [ | In a structural equation model, stigma was associated with reduced adherence ( |
| Rintamaki | Cross-sectional study of 204 outpatients at two urban academic medical centre clinics in Illinois and Louisiana | 2001 | Summated rating scale of 3 items from the Patient Medication Adherence Questionnaire (PMAQ) [ | Non-adherence defined as any missed doses in the prior four days, assessed using the PMAQ | High stigma was associated with greater odds of non-adherence (AOR=3.3; 95% CI=1.4–8.1), after adjusting for race & education |
| Rotheram-Borus | Secondary analysis of baseline data from a randomized controlled trial of 409 adults recruited from 4 district hospitals in northern Thailand | 2009 | 7-item summative rating scale assessing extent of HIV serostatus disclosure to social network ties | Self-reported lifetime adherence, with good adherence defined as never having missed a dose | Disclosure had a statistically significant association with adherence ( |
| Rougemont | Longitudinal study of 312 treatment-naïve adults initiating ART in Yaoundé, Cameroun | 2006–07 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus to family | Pharmacy refill, with “non-adherers” defined as “renewal of prescriptions of later than two weeks” | Non-disclosure did not have a statistically significant association with non-adherence (AOR=0.98; 95% CI=0.81–1.18), after adjustment for income, education and distance to clinic |
| Sayles | Cross-sectional study of 202 adults recruited from 5 community organizations and 2 HIV clinic sites in Los Angeles | 2007 | 28-item internalized stigma scale [ | Seven-day self-reported ART adherence as measured on a 5-point Likert scale [ | A high level of internalized stigma was not associated with suboptimal adherence (AOR=2.09; 95% CI=0.81–5.39), after adjusting for mental health, race, education, income, insurance and years since diagnosis |
| Spire | Longitudinal study of 445 treatment-naïve adults initiating ART, recruited from 47 hospitals across France | 1997 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus to a family member | Self-reported adherence over prior four days, with “adherent” defined as 100% adherence | 71% of participants who had disclosed to a family member at baseline were classified as adherent four months later, compared to 76% of those who had not disclosed ( |
| Stirratt | Cross-sectional study of 215 adults recruited from 2 outpatient HIV clinics in New York City | 2000–04 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus to up to 15 family members and 15 personal contacts [ | 14-day ART adherence as measured by electronic event monitoring | Percentage of informed family members had a statistically significant association with ART adherence ( |
| after adjusting for self-efficacy, motivation and outcome expectancies | |||||
| Sumari-de Boer | Cross-sectional study of 201 outpatients at an academic medical centre HIV clinic in Amsterdam, the Netherlands | 2008–09 | Personalized stigma and disclosure concerns sub-scales of the HIV stigma scale [ | 30-day pharmacy refill adherence, with non-adherence defined as<100% adherence | Non-adherence had a statistically significant association with disclosure concerns (AOR=1.1; 95% CI=1.01–1.2) but not personalized stigma (AOR not reported), after adjusting for years since diagnosis, quality of life and depression symptom severity |
| Van Dyk [ | Cross-sectional study of 439 adults recruited from public health HIV clinics and hospitals in Pretoria, South Africa | 2008 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus to partner | 30-day self-reported adherence as elicited through a visual assessment scale [ | 41% of participants who had disclosed to partners reported optimum adherence, compared to 21% of participants who had not disclosed ( |
| Vanable | Cross sectional study of 221 outpatients in central New York state | 2001 | Five-item frequency of stigma-related experiences scale | Summary self-reported adherence measure averaged across 4 items based on a seven-day recall period | Stigma-related experiences had a negative association with self-reported adherence ( |
| Waite | Cross-sectional study of 204 outpatients at two urban academic medical centre clinics in Illinois and Louisiana | 2001 | Summated rating scale of 3 items from the Patient Medication Adherence Questionnaire (PMAQ) [ | Non-adherence defined as any missed doses in the prior four days, assessed using a modified version of the PMAQ | A high level of stigma was associated with increased odds of non-adherence (AOR=3.1; 95% CI=1.3–7.7), after adjusting for insurance coverage, employment, mental disorder and history of alcohol or drug treatment |
| Wang | Cross-sectional study of 308 adults recruited from seven treatment sites in China | 2006 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus | Seven-day self-reported adherence, with good adherence defined as>90% of doses taken | Disclosure did not have a statistically significant association with adherence (estimates not shown) |
| Watt [ | Cross sectional study of 340 persons in Tanzania | 2007 | 10-item perceived stigma scale [ | Self-reported missed doses in the prior four days [ | On univariable analysis, neither stigma nor disclosure had statistically significant associations with optimal adherence (estimates not shown) |
| Weiser | Cross-sectional study of 109 persons recruited from three private clinics in Botswana | 2000 | Disclosure of HIV serostatus | 12-month self-reported adherence [ | On univariable analysis, disclosure did not have a statistically significant association with good adherence (OR=3.55; 95% CI=0.91–13.92) |
| Wolitski | Cross-sectional study of 637 homeless or unstably housed persons in three U.S. cities | 2004 | Modified 6-item internalized and 6-item perceived HIV stigma scales [ | Self-reported missed doses in the prior two days and seven days | Perceived stigma, but not internalized stigma, was associated with increased odds of missed doses in the past two days (AOR=1.40; 95% CI=1.00–1.95) and past seven days (AOR=1.41; 95% CI=1.05–1.89), after adjusting for housing status, education, and years since HIV diagnosis |
Refers to date of publication, as dates of data collection were not clearly described.
Figure 3Conceptual model. This figure summarizes the findings of our meta-synthesis of 34 qualitative studies and analysis of 41 quantitative studies. The stigma of HIV was found to compromise ART adherence through general as well as group-specific psychological processes. Adaptive coping and social support were critical determinants of participants’ ability to overcome structural and economic barriers associated with poverty to successfully adhere to ART.