| Literature DB >> 35689708 |
Michael B Frisby1, Matthew A Diemer2, Daniel E Sack3, Carolyn M Audet4,5.
Abstract
Psychometric instruments can quantify how people living with HIV experience three key barriers to antiretroviral therapy (ART) and retention: partner support, trust in medical professionals, and internalized HIV-related stigma. However, two challenges arise when using these instruments to measure and interpret relational processes among Mozambican couples, especially those participating in a couples intervention. First, relational measures have almost exclusively been developed and normed with Western, middle-class, and/or White adults. Second, traditional measurement approaches neglect the relational processes between partners. Using dyadic modeling, this paper demonstrates metric and scalar invariance for instruments measuring partner support (CFI = 0.964, TLI = 0.965, RMSEA = 0.034, SRMR = 0.052), trust in medical professionals (CFI = 0.978, TLI = 0.980, RMSEA = 0.033, SRMR = 0.039), and internalized HIV-related stigma (CFI = 0.960, TLI = 0.961, RMSEA = 0.050, SRMR = 0.060) within the novel context of seroconcordant HIV+ couples in Zambézia province.Entities:
Keywords: ART; Dyadic; Factor analysis; HIV stigma; Measurement; Physician trust; Social support
Year: 2022 PMID: 35689708 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-022-03739-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165