Chipimo Peter J, Fylkesnes Knut
University of Zambia, School of Medicine, Department of Community Medicine, P/Bag Rw X1, Lusaka, Zambia.
BMC Public Health. 2009 Aug 18;9:298. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-9-298.
Population level data on mental health from Africa are limited, but available data indicate mental problems to represent a substantial public health problem. The negative impact of HIV on mental health suggests that this could particularly be the case in high prevalence populations. We examined the prevalence of mental distress, distribution patterns and the ways HIV might influence mental health among men and women in a general population.
The relationship between HIV infection and mental distress was explored using a sample of 4466 participants in a population-based HIV survey conducted in selected rural and urban communities in Zambia in 2003. The Self-reporting questionnaire-10 (SRQ-10) was used to assess global mental distress. Weights were assigned to the SRQ-10 responses based on DSM IV criteria for depression and a cut off point set at 7/20 for probable cases of mental distress. A structural equation modeling (SEM) was established to assess the structural relationship between HIV infection and mental distress in the model, with maximum likelihood ratio as the method of estimation.
The HIV prevalence was 13.6% vs. 18% in the rural and urban populations, respectively. The prevalence of mental distress was substantially higher among women than men and among groups with low educational attainment vs. high. The results of the SEM showed a close fit with the data. The final model revealed that self-rated health and self perceived HIV risk and worry of being HIV infected were important mediators between underlying factors, HIV infection and mental distress. The effect of HIV infection on mental distress was both direct and indirect, but was particularly strong through the indirect effects of health ratings and self perceived risk and worry of HIV infection.
These findings suggest a strong effect of HIV infection on mental distress. In this population where few knew their HIV status, this effect was mediated through self-perceptions of health status, found to capture changes in health perceptions related to HIV, and self-perceived risk and worry of actually being HIV infected.
来自非洲的心理健康方面的人群水平数据有限,但现有数据表明心理问题是一个重大的公共卫生问题。艾滋病毒对心理健康的负面影响表明,在高流行人群中情况可能尤其如此。我们调查了普通人群中男性和女性心理困扰的患病率、分布模式以及艾滋病毒可能影响心理健康的方式。
2003年在赞比亚选定的农村和城市社区进行了一项基于人群的艾滋病毒调查,以4466名参与者为样本,探讨艾滋病毒感染与心理困扰之间的关系。使用自填式问卷调查表-10(SRQ-10)评估总体心理困扰。根据《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)的抑郁症标准为SRQ-10的回答赋予权重,并将心理困扰可能病例的临界值设定为7/20。建立了结构方程模型(SEM),以评估模型中艾滋病毒感染与心理困扰之间的结构关系,采用最大似然比作为估计方法。
农村和城市人群中的艾滋病毒患病率分别为13.6%和18%。女性的心理困扰患病率明显高于男性,低教育程度组的患病率高于高教育程度组。结构方程模型的结果与数据拟合良好。最终模型显示,自评健康、自我感知的艾滋病毒风险以及对感染艾滋病毒的担忧是潜在因素、艾滋病毒感染和心理困扰之间的重要中介因素。艾滋病毒感染对心理困扰的影响既有直接的也有间接的,但通过健康评级以及自我感知的艾滋病毒风险和担忧的间接影响尤为强烈。
这些发现表明艾滋病毒感染对心理困扰有强烈影响。在这个很少有人知道自己艾滋病毒感染状况的人群中,这种影响是通过对健康状况的自我认知介导的,发现这种认知捕捉了与艾滋病毒相关的健康认知变化,以及对实际感染艾滋病毒的自我感知风险和担忧。