Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Exploring Social Ecological Pathways From Resilience To Quality Of Life Among Women Living With Hiv In Canada

Carmen H. Logie,Ying Wang,Mina Kazemi,Roula Hawa,Angela Kaida,Tracey Conway,Kath Webster,Alexandra De Pokomandy,Mona Loutfy,Rahma Abdul-Noor,Aranka Anema,Jonathan Angel,Jean-Guy Baril, Fatimatou Barry,Greta Bauer,Kerrigan Beaver, Denise Becker,Anita Benoit,Jason Brophy,Lori Brotto,Ann Burchell,Claudette Cardinal, Allison Carlson,Allison Carter,Angela Cescon,Lynne Cioppa, Jeffrey Cohen,Guillaume Colley, Tracey Conway, Curtis Cooper,Jasmine Cotnam, Janette Cousineau, Janice Dayle, Marisol Desbiens, Hania Dubinsky,Daniele Dubuc, Janice Duddy,Brenda Gagnier, Jacqueline Gahagan, Claudine Gasingirwa, Nada Gataric,Saara Greene, Trevor Hart, Catherine Hankins,Bob Hogg,Terry Howard,Shazia Islam, Evin Jones, Charu Kaushic, Alexandria Keating,Logan Kennedy,Mary Kestler, Maxime Kiboyogo,Marina Klein,Gladys Kwaramba, Andrea Langlois,Melanie Lee, Rebecca Lee,Lynne Leonard,Johanna Lewis,Viviane Lima,Elisa Lloyd-Smith, Carmen Logie,Shari Margolese,Carrie Martin,Renee Masching,Lyne Massie, Melissa Medjuck,Brigitte Menard,Cari Miller, Deborah Money,Marvelous Muchenje, Mary Mwalwanda, Mary (Muthoni) Ndungu,Valerie Nicholson, Illuminee Nzikwikiza,Kelly O'Brien,Nadia O'Brien, Gina Ogilvie,Susanna Ogunnaike-Cooke, Joanne Otis, Ali Palmer,Sophie Patterson,Doris Peltier, Yasmeen (Ashria) Persad,Neora Pick, Alie Pierre, Jeff Powis,Karene Proulx-Boucher, Corinna Quan, Janet Raboud, Anita Rachlis,Edward Ralph, Stephanie Rawson,Eric Roth,Danielle Rouleau,Sean Rourke, Sergio Rueda, Mercy Saavedra,Kate Salters,Margarite Sanchez,Roger Sandre, Jacquie Sas,Paul Sereda,Fiona Smaill, Stephanie Smith, Marcie Summers, Tsitsi Tigere,Wangari Tharao,Jamie Thomas-Pavanel, Christina Tom, Cecile Tremblay,Benoit Trottier,Sylvie Trottier,Christos Tsoukas, Anne Wagner, Sharon Walmsley, Kath Webster,Wendy Wobeser, Jessica Yee,Mark Yudin, Wendy Zhang

AIDS CARE-PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIO-MEDICAL ASPECTS OF AIDS/HIV(2018)

Cited 16|Views10
No score
Abstract
Resilience, positive growth in contexts of stress and adversity, is shaped by social ecological factors. Among people living with HIV, resilience is associated with myriad positive health benefits and improved health-related quality of life (HR-QoL). Identifying contextual factors associated with resilience among women living with HIV (WLWH) is particularly important as this population experiences many stressors and inequalities. We examined social-ecological factors associated with resilience and its relationship with HR-QoL among WLWH. We utilized baseline survey data from a national cohort of WLWH (n=1424) in Canada. We conducted structural equation modelling using maximum likelihood estimation methods to test the direct effects of social support and women-centred HIV care (WCHC) on resilience, and the direct effects of resilience on mental and physical HR-QoL. We also tested the indirect effects of resilience on HR-QoL via HIV disclosure concerns and economic insecurity. Participant median age was 43 years (IQR=35-50); most participants were women of colour (29% Black; 22% Indigenous; 7% other ethnicities; 41% Caucasian). Social support and WCHC were associated with increased resilience. The direct path from resilience to mental HR-QoL was significant, accounting for the mediation effects of economic insecurity and social support. The direct path from resilience to physical HR-QoL was significant, accounting for the mediation effects of economic insecurity. Economic insecurity partially mediated the relationship between resilience and mental HR-QoL and physical HR-QoL. HIV disclosure concerns partially mediated the relationship between resilience and mental-HR-QoL. Model fit indices suggested that the model fit the data well (2[14]=160.378, P<0.001; CFI=0.987; RMSE=0.048 [90% CI:0.042-0.080]; SRMR=0.036). Findings suggest social (social support) and structural (WCHC) factors increase resilience. While resilience is associated with improved HR-QoL, social (HIV disclosure concerns) and structural (economic insecurity) factors partially mediate these associations and threaten HR-QoL. Multi-level interventions can address social ecological contexts to advance resilience and HR-QoL among WLWH.
More
Translated text
Key words
Resilience,women,HIV,social support,stigma
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined