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Social Support in Newly Diagnosed People living With HIV: Expectations and Satisfaction Along Time, Predictors, and Mental Health Correlates

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Fecha
2017-11-01
Autor
Garrido Hernansaiz, Helena
Alonso Tapia, Jesús
Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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Social support usually decreases following HIV diagnosis, and decreased support is related to worsening mental health. We investigated the evolution of social support after HIV diagnosis and its relationship to anxiety, depression, and resilience, and sought to develop a social support prediction model. There were 119 newly diagnosed Spanish speakers who participated in this longitudinal study, completing measures of social support, internalized stigma, disclosure concerns, degree of disclosure, coping, anxiety, depression, and resilience. Bivariate associations and multiple regression analyses were performed. Results showed that the highest levels of support arose from friends, health care providers, and partners, and that social support decreased following diagnosis. Subsequent social support was negatively predicted by avoidance coping and positively by approach coping, steady partnership, and disclosure. It was significantly associated with decreased anxiety and depression and higher resilience. Interventions should seek to promote mental health in people living with HIV by increasing social support.
 
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11531/107989
Social Support in Newly Diagnosed People living With HIV: Expectations and Satisfaction Along Time, Predictors, and Mental Health Correlates
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistas
ISSN
1055-3290
Palabras Clave
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anxiety, coping, depression, HIV, resilience, social support, stigma
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Repositorio de la Universidad Pontificia Comillas copyright © 2015  Desarrollado con DSpace Software
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