Illangasekare Samantha L, Burke Jessica G, Chander Geetanjali, Gielen Andrea C
Department of Population, Family, and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Womens Health Issues. 2014 Sep-Oct;24(5):551-7. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2014.05.004.
Intimate partner violence (IPV), HIV/AIDS, and substance use are described as the SAVA "syndemic" among low-income urban women because of their intersecting and synergistic presence in these women's lives. Depressive symptoms are significantly associated with these SAVA factors and although social support is potentially protective for depression, little is understood about its impact on depression associated with the SAVA syndemic.
This paper investigates how women living with SAVA experience and describe depressive symptoms, and examines how the types of social support they access impact their experiences of SAVA and depressive symptoms. Qualitative, in-depth interviews were conducted with 24 HIV-positive, low-income, urban women who experienced IPV and used cocaine or heroin in their lifetime. Interviews were analyzed based on study aims, principles of thematic content analysis, and grounded theory.
Women identified multiple SAVA factors as catalysts for depression and noted their synergistic effect on depressive symptoms, which were both a trigger for and a result of drug use. Women accessed varying sources of social support to address their SAVA factors and associated symptoms of depression, relying on informal sources for instrumental support related to IPV and formal sources for support related to HIV, drug use, and depression.
These findings have important implications for health providers who serve SAVA-affected women, and suggest that comprehensively addressing all SAVA factors (and IPV in particular) and improving their access to quality social support at critical times is essential to improve their mental health.
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)、艾滋病毒/艾滋病和药物使用在低收入城市女性中被描述为SAVA“综合征”,因为它们在这些女性的生活中相互交织且具有协同作用。抑郁症状与这些SAVA因素显著相关,尽管社会支持可能对抑郁症有保护作用,但对于其对与SAVA综合征相关的抑郁症的影响却知之甚少。
本文调查了患有SAVA的女性如何体验和描述抑郁症状,并研究了她们获得的社会支持类型如何影响她们的SAVA经历和抑郁症状。对24名艾滋病毒呈阳性、低收入的城市女性进行了定性深入访谈,这些女性曾经历过亲密伴侣暴力,且一生中使用过可卡因或海洛因。访谈基于研究目的、主题内容分析原则和扎根理论进行分析。
女性将多种SAVA因素确定为抑郁症的催化剂,并指出它们对抑郁症状具有协同作用,这些症状既是药物使用的触发因素,也是药物使用的结果。女性通过多种社会支持来源来应对她们的SAVA因素和相关的抑郁症状,在应对亲密伴侣暴力相关问题时依靠非正式来源获得工具性支持,在应对与艾滋病毒、药物使用和抑郁症相关问题时依靠正式来源获得支持。
这些发现对为受SAVA影响的女性提供服务的医疗服务提供者具有重要意义,并表明全面解决所有SAVA因素(尤其是亲密伴侣暴力)以及在关键时期改善她们获得优质社会支持的机会对于改善她们的心理健康至关重要。