Nöstlinger Christiana, Bakeera-Kitaka Sabrina, Buyze Jozefien, Loos Jasna, Buvé Anne
a Department of Public Health , Institute of Tropical Medicine , Antwerp , Belgium.
c Baylor-Uganda , Kampala , Uganda.
AIDS Care. 2015;27 Suppl 1(sup1):36-46. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2015.1051501.
Adolescents living with HIV (ALHIV) face many psychosocial challenges, including HIV disclosure to others. Given the importance of socialization during the adolescent transition process, this study investigated the psychological and social factors influencing self-disclosure of own HIV status to peers. We examined social HIV self-disclosure to peers, and its relationship to perceived HIV-related stigma, self-efficacy to disclose, self-esteem, and social support among a sample of n = 582 ALHIV aged 13-17 years in Kampala, Uganda, and Western Kenya. Data were collected between February and April 2011. Among them, 39% were double orphans. We conducted a secondary data analysis to assess the degree of social disclosure, reactions received, and influencing factors. Interviewer-administered questionnaires assessed medical, socio-demographic, and psychological variables (Rosenberg self-esteem scale; self-efficacy to disclose to peers), HIV-related stigma (10-item stigma scale), and social support (family-life and friends). Descriptive, bivariate, and logistic regression analyses were performed with social self-disclosure to peers with gender as covariates. Almost half of ALHIV had told nobody (except health-care providers) about their HIV status, and about 18% had disclosed to either one of their friends, schoolmates, or a boy- or girlfriend. Logistic regression models revealed that having disclosed to peers was significantly related to being older, being a paternal orphan, contributing to family income, regular visits to the HIV clinic, and greater social support through peers. Low self-efficacy to disclose was negatively associated to the outcome variable. While social self-disclosure was linked to individual factors such as self-efficacy, factors relating to the social context and adolescents' access to psychosocial resources play an important role. ALHIV need safe environments to practice disclosure skills. Interventions should enable them to make optimal use of available psychosocial resources even under constraining conditions such as disruptive family structures.
感染艾滋病毒的青少年(ALHIV)面临许多心理社会挑战,包括向他人披露自己感染艾滋病毒的情况。鉴于在青少年过渡过程中社交的重要性,本研究调查了影响向同龄人自我披露自身艾滋病毒感染状况的心理和社会因素。我们在乌干达坎帕拉和肯尼亚西部的582名年龄在13至17岁的感染艾滋病毒青少年样本中,研究了向同龄人进行社交性艾滋病毒自我披露及其与感知到的艾滋病毒相关耻辱感、披露自我效能感、自尊和社会支持之间的关系。数据于2011年2月至4月收集。其中,39%是双亲孤儿。我们进行了二次数据分析,以评估社交披露程度、收到的反应及影响因素。由访谈员管理的问卷评估了医疗、社会人口统计学和心理变量(罗森伯格自尊量表;向同龄人披露的自我效能感)、艾滋病毒相关耻辱感(10项耻辱感量表)和社会支持(家庭生活和朋友)。以性别作为协变量,对向同龄人进行的社交自我披露进行了描述性、双变量和逻辑回归分析。几乎一半的感染艾滋病毒青少年没有向任何人(除了医疗服务提供者)透露过自己的艾滋病毒感染状况,约18%的人向他们的一个朋友、同学或男女朋友透露过。逻辑回归模型显示,向同龄人披露与年龄较大、是父亲去世的孤儿、为家庭收入做出贡献、定期前往艾滋病毒诊所就诊以及通过同龄人获得更多社会支持显著相关。披露自我效能感低与结果变量呈负相关。虽然社交自我披露与自我效能感等个体因素有关,但与社会背景以及青少年获得心理社会资源相关的因素也起着重要作用。感染艾滋病毒的青少年需要安全的环境来练习披露技巧。干预措施应使他们即使在诸如家庭结构破裂等受限条件下也能最佳地利用现有的心理社会资源。