Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, University of California San Francisco, USA.
AIDS Patient Care STDS. 2012 Mar;26(3):181-90. doi: 10.1089/apc.2011.0282. Epub 2012 Jan 18.
Disclosing HIV status to friends, family, and sex partners is often stressful. However, HIV disclosure has been associated with improved physical health, psychological well-being, and improved health behaviors. The aim of this study was to address some of the gaps in the literature regarding the disclosure process by conducting a mixed-methods study of disclosure in people newly diagnosed with HIV and the relationship of disclosure to stigma and social support. The CHAI (Coping, HIV, and Affect Interview) Study was a longitudinal cohort study that followed individuals who were newly diagnosed with HIV. The study took place from October 2004 to June 2008 in the San Francisco Bay Area. This sample includes data from 50 participants who were interviewed 1, 3, and 9 months following diagnosis with HIV. We identified four main approaches to HIV disclosure that revealed distinct differences in how participants appraised disclosure, whether disclosure was experienced as stressful, and whether disclosure or nondisclosure functioned as a way of coping with an HIV diagnosis. Implications of these findings for disclosure counseling are discussed.
向朋友、家人和性伴侣透露 HIV 状况通常会带来压力。然而,HIV 披露与改善身体健康、心理健康和改善健康行为有关。本研究旨在通过对新诊断出 HIV 的人群的披露过程进行混合方法研究,以及披露与污名和社会支持的关系,来解决文献中的一些空白。CHAI(应对、HIV 和影响访谈)研究是一项纵向队列研究,跟踪新诊断出 HIV 的个体。该研究于 2004 年 10 月至 2008 年 6 月在旧金山湾区进行。本样本包括 50 名参与者的数据,他们在 HIV 诊断后 1、3 和 9 个月接受了访谈。我们确定了 HIV 披露的四种主要方法,这些方法揭示了参与者对披露的评价、披露是否被体验为压力,以及披露或不披露是否作为应对 HIV 诊断的一种方式的明显差异。讨论了这些发现对披露咨询的意义。