Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases and Global Public Health, University of California-San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA.
Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
J Adolesc. 2024 Jul;96(5):1048-1064. doi: 10.1002/jad.12315. Epub 2024 Mar 15.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-related stigma affects adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) for youth living with HIV. Emotion regulation strategies such as cognitive reappraisal (reinterpreting adversity to mitigate emotional impact) and expressive suppression (inhibiting emotion-expressive behavior activated by adversity) may moderate the HIV stigma-ART adherence relationship in this group.
Using baseline data from 208 youth living with HIV aged 15-24 years enrolled in an mHealth ART-adherence intervention, we performed modified Poisson regressions with robust variance between HIV stigma (internalized, anticipated, enacted) and ART nonadherence. We tested for multiplicative interaction via product terms between HIV stigma and emotion regulation scores, and additive interaction via relative excess risk due to interaction and attributable proportion using dichotomous HIV stigma and emotion regulation variables.
Mean age was 21 years; ≥50% of participants were cisgender male, non-Hispanic Black, and gay-identifying; 18% reported ART nonadherence. Confounder-adjusted regressions showed positive associations between each HIV stigma variable and ART nonadherence. Internalized HIV stigma and cognitive reappraisal negatively, multiplicatively interacted (as internalized HIV stigma increased, ART nonadherence increased for those with low cognitive reappraisal). High internalized HIV stigma positively, additively interacted with low cognitive reappraisal and low expressive suppression (when high internalized HIV stigma and low levels of either emotion regulation strategy were present, ART nonadherence increased dramatically).
Cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression may protect against internalized HIV stigma's harmful association with ART nonadherence. These modifiable emotion regulation strategies may be targeted to potentially buffer the effects of internalized HIV stigma and support ART adherence for youth living with HIV.
与人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)相关的耻辱感会影响感染 HIV 的青年对抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)的依从性。情绪调节策略,如认知重评(重新解释逆境以减轻情绪影响)和表达抑制(抑制由逆境引发的情绪表达行为),可能会调节这一群体中 HIV 耻辱感与 ART 依从性的关系。
利用一项 mHealth ART 依从性干预研究中招募的 208 名年龄在 15-24 岁之间的 HIV 感染者的基线数据,我们对 HIV 耻辱感(内化、预期、实施)与 ART 不依从之间的关系进行了修正泊松回归分析。我们通过 HIV 耻辱感和情绪调节得分的乘积项检验了乘法交互作用,通过交互的相对超额风险和归因比例(使用二分类 HIV 耻辱感和情绪调节变量)检验了加法交互作用。
平均年龄为 21 岁;≥50%的参与者为顺性别男性、非西班牙裔黑人、同性恋;18%的人报告 ART 不依从。经混杂因素调整的回归分析显示,每个 HIV 耻辱感变量与 ART 不依从之间均呈正相关。内化的 HIV 耻辱感与认知重评呈负向、乘法交互作用(随着内化的 HIV 耻辱感的增加,认知重评低的患者 ART 不依从率增加)。内化的 HIV 耻辱感与低认知重评和低表达抑制呈正向、加法交互作用(当内化的 HIV 耻辱感和任一情绪调节策略水平较低时,ART 不依从率会显著增加)。
认知重评和表达抑制可能会保护内化的 HIV 耻辱感与 ART 不依从之间的有害联系。这些可改变的情绪调节策略可能会被针对,以潜在地缓冲内化的 HIV 耻辱感的影响,并支持感染 HIV 的青年对 ART 的依从性。