Espino Susan Ryerson, Fletcher Jason, Gonzalez Marisol, Precht Allison, Xavier Jessica, Matoff-Stepp Sabrina
1 Ruth M. Rothstein CORE Center , Chicago, Ilinois.
AIDS Patient Care STDS. 2015 Jan;29 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S36-41. doi: 10.1089/apc.2014.0275.
Recent research suggests intimate partner violence (IPV) is commonly experienced by many people living with HIV/AIDS, which can complicate their care. We introduce a novel approach to screening for history of violence among 102 women of color living with HIV and receiving care at an outpatient public health clinic. Using a composite measure composed of data from a variety of screening tools, we were able to determine that 70.6% of the women had a history of violence using the composite measure, and that 43% screened positive using multiple screening tools. Although overall viral load suppression rate was high at 81.4%, women with a history of violence were less likely to be virally suppressed when compared to those without such a history (76.4% versus 93.3%, p<0.05). Our findings suggest using a variety of screening questions at entry and at follow-up care appointments may be key to identifying and supporting women survivors who may not disclose violence when first asked. Future research should foster further development, analysis, and use of a variety of screening tools such as those used in this study.
近期研究表明,许多感染艾滋病毒/艾滋病的人普遍遭受亲密伴侣暴力(IPV),这会使他们的治疗变得复杂。我们引入了一种新方法,用于对102名感染艾滋病毒且在门诊公共卫生诊所接受治疗的有色人种女性的暴力史进行筛查。通过使用由各种筛查工具的数据组成的综合指标,我们能够确定,使用该综合指标有70.6%的女性有暴力史,并且使用多种筛查工具筛查呈阳性的比例为43%。尽管总体病毒载量抑制率较高,为81.4%,但有暴力史的女性与没有此类病史的女性相比,病毒得到抑制的可能性较小(76.4%对93.3%,p<0.05)。我们的研究结果表明,在初次就诊和后续护理预约时使用各种筛查问题,可能是识别和支持那些在首次被询问时可能不会透露暴力情况的女性幸存者的关键。未来的研究应促进进一步开发、分析和使用各种筛查工具,如本研究中使用的那些工具。