Miles Margaret Shandor, Holditch-Davis Diane, Eron Joseph, Black Beth Perry, Pedersen Cort, Harris Donna A
School of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 27599-7460, USA.
Nurs Res. 2003 Nov-Dec;52(6):350-60. doi: 10.1097/00006199-200311000-00002.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection has become a serious health problem for low-income African American women in their childbearing years. Interventions that help them cope with feelings about having HIV and increase their understanding of HIV as a chronic disease in which self-care practices, regular health visits, and medications can improve the quality of life can lead to better health outcomes.
This study aimed to determine the efficacy of an HIV self-care symptom management intervention for emotional distress and perceptions of health among low-income African American mothers with HIV.
Women caregivers of young children were randomly assigned to self-care symptom management intervention or usual care. The intervention, based on a conceptual model related to HIV in African American women, involved six home visits by registered nurses. A baseline pretest and two posttests were conducted with the mothers in both groups. Emotional distress was assessed as depressive symptoms, affective state, stigma, and worry about HIV. Health, self-reported by the mothers, included the number of infections and aspects of health-related quality of life (i.e., perception of health, physical function, energy, health distress, and role function).
Regarding emotional distress, the mothers in the experimental group reported fewer feelings of stigma than the mothers in the control group. Outcome assessments of health indicated that the mothers in the experimental group reported higher physical function scores than the control mothers. Within group analysis over time showed a reduction in negative affective state (depression/dejection and tension/anxiety) and stigma as well as infections in the intervention group mothers, whereas a decline in physical and role function was found in the control group.
The HIV symptom management intervention has potential as a case management or clinical intervention model for use by public health nurses visiting the home or by advanced practice nurses who see HIV-infected women in primary care or specialty clinics.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染已成为低收入育龄非裔美国女性面临的严重健康问题。采取干预措施帮助她们应对感染HIV的感受,并增强她们对HIV作为一种慢性病的理解,即自我护理措施、定期健康检查和药物治疗可改善生活质量,这可能会带来更好的健康结果。
本研究旨在确定针对感染HIV的低收入非裔美国母亲开展的HIV自我护理症状管理干预对情绪困扰和健康认知的效果。
幼儿的女性照料者被随机分配至自我护理症状管理干预组或常规护理组。该干预基于一个与非裔美国女性HIV相关的概念模型,由注册护士进行6次家访。对两组母亲均进行了基线预测试和两次后测试。情绪困扰评估包括抑郁症状、情感状态、耻辱感和对HIV的担忧。母亲自我报告的健康状况包括感染次数以及健康相关生活质量的各个方面(即健康认知、身体功能、精力、健康困扰和角色功能)。
在情绪困扰方面,实验组母亲报告的耻辱感低于对照组母亲。健康结果评估表明,实验组母亲报告的身体功能得分高于对照组母亲。随时间进行的组内分析显示,干预组母亲的负面情感状态(抑郁/沮丧和紧张/焦虑)、耻辱感以及感染次数均有所减少,而对照组母亲的身体和角色功能则出现下降。
HIV症状管理干预作为一种病例管理或临床干预模式具有潜力,可供上门访视的公共卫生护士或在初级保健或专科诊所接待HIV感染女性的高级执业护士使用。