Literature DB >> 29081046

Depressive Symptoms, Disclosure, HIV-Related Stigma, and Coping Following HIV Testing Among Outpatients in Uganda: A Daily Process Analysis.

Susan M Kiene1, Meredith Dove2, Rhoda K Wanyenze3.   

Abstract

As efforts to end the HIV epidemic accelerate there is emphasis on reaching those living with undiagnosed HIV infection. Newly diagnosed individuals face a number of psychosocial challenges, yet we know little about depressive symptoms in the weeks immediately following diagnosis and how disclosure, coping, and other factors may affect short and longer-term depressive symptoms. Purposively sampled Ugandan outpatients completed structured interviews immediately prior to testing for HIV, daily for 28 days after receiving their test results, and at 3 and 6 months post-test. The sample included a total of 244 participants: 20 who tested HIV positive at baseline and who provided 342 daily data points, and 224 who tested HIV negative at baseline and who provided 4388 daily data points. We used linear mixed effects modeling to examine changes in depressive symptom scores over the 28 day daily interview period and predictors of depressive symptom scores and changes over time. Results from the mixed modeling revealed that while those diagnosed with HIV showed initially high depressive symptoms following diagnosis, their symptoms decreased significantly and on average fell below the cutoff for possible depression approximately 15 days after diagnosis. Among those who tested HIV-negative, on average their depressive symptoms were below the cutoff for possible depression and did not change over time. Among those diagnosed with HIV, disclosure, especially to a partner, on a particular day was associated with higher depressive symptoms that day. However, those who disclosed to their partner during the 28 days after diagnosis had significantly lower depression scores by the end of the 28 days as well as lower depression scores 3 and 6 months after diagnosis than did those who did not disclose to their partner during the 28 days after diagnosis. Scoring higher on HIV-related stigma on a particular day was associated with higher depressive symptoms that day and engaging in positive coping on a particular day was associated with lower depressive symptoms that day. Positive coping also accelerated the decrease in depressive symptoms over time. These data underscore the importance of timely disclosure to partners and suggest that regular depression screening after diagnosis and provision of mental health services could improve HIV care engagement and treatment outcomes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Coping; Daily process; Depression; Disclosure; HIV; HIV stigma; HIV testing; sub-Saharan Africa

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29081046      PMCID: PMC5903948          DOI: 10.1007/s10461-017-1953-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Behav        ISSN: 1090-7165


  73 in total

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Authors:  S C Kalichman; L C Simbayi
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Authors:  Seth C Kalichman; Leickness C Simbayi; Allanise Cloete; Phumelele P Mthembu; Ruth N Mkhonta; Themba Ginindza
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Authors:  Judith A Cook; Dennis Grey; Jane Burke; Mardge H Cohen; Alejandra C Gurtman; Jean L Richardson; Tracey E Wilson; Mary A Young; Nancy A Hessol
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Review 9.  HIV and depression: 2008 review and update.

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Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2015
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  6 in total

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Authors:  Alan R Lifson; Sale Workneh; Abera Hailemichael; Richard F MacLehose; Keith J Horvath; Rose Hilk; Anne Sites; Tibebe Shenie
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4.  Mediators of Intervention Effects on Depressive Symptoms Among People Living With HIV: Secondary Analysis of a Mobile Health Randomized Controlled Trial Using Latent Growth Curve Modeling.

Authors:  Mengting Zhu; Weiping Cai; Linghua Li; Yan Guo; Aliza Monroe-Wise; Yiran Li; Chengbo Zeng; Jiaying Qiao; Zhimeng Xu; Hanxi Zhang; Yu Zeng; Cong Liu
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5.  HIV disclosure and depressive symptoms among pregnant women living with HIV: a cross-sectional study in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

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6.  Depression symptoms, HIV testing, linkage to ART, and viral suppression among women in a high HIV burden district in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: A cross-sectional household study.

Authors:  Kaymarlin Govender; Dick Durevall; Richard G Cowden; Sean Beckett; Ayesha Bm Kharsany; Lara Lewis; Gavin George; Cherie Cawood; David Khanyile
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  6 in total

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