Project Details
Description
DESCRIPTION (adapted from Abstract): As antiretroviral and prophylactic
treatments for HIV and associated diseases become increasingly effective in
impeding disease progression, growing numbers of individuals will live with
HIV infection as a chronic illness for lengthening periods of time. Hence,
to understand how these individuals manage the many adaptive tasks
associated with their seropositive status and to assess the quality of life
they achieve is important for the provision of their care. The Principal
Investigator proposes to examine the psychosocial adaption to living with
HIV infection among late middle-age and elderly (50+ years) adults from the
greater New York City metropolitan area--an epicenter of the epidemic for
older adults. These older HIV-infected individuals represent a very
understudied segment of the population impacted by the AIDS epidemic. The
research focus will be on identifying similarities and differences in
adaptive tasks posed by the illness, coping responses evoked, and
adaptational outcomes among infected individuals from three race/ethnic
groups: native-born, non-Hispanic-whites, native-born African-Americans,
and Puerto Ricans. A total of 60 infected older adults, 20 from each
race/ethnic group, will be studied; within each race/ethnic group, 13 cases
will be men and seven women. Given the dearth of information about the
psychosocial adaption of older HIV-infected adults, a qualitative research
design is proposed.
The specific aims are: (1) to identify and describe the varied adaptive
tasks that older HIV-infected adults must accomplish to successfully adjust
to their condition and how these may or may not vary by race/ethnicity, by
gender, by disease stage (AIDS vs. HIV-positive); (2) to identify and
describe the coping strategies used by older HIV-infected adults to address
the varied adaptive challenges posed by their condition and how these may or
may not vary by race/ethnicity, by gender, by disease stage; (3) to examine,
for each adaptive task, the consequences (i.e., both adaptive and
maladaptive) of alternative coping responses and how these may or may not
vary by race/ethnicity, by gender, and by disease stage; (4) to examine
older, HIV-infected adults' perceptions of the adequacy of available
informal and formal support, and their perceptions of factors that impede or
facilitate access to needed support resources; and (5) to gather information
that will inform the design of a subsequent survey study of the research
issues (e.g., information regarding appropriate criteria for successful
adaptation, data on the suitability of existing standardized measures for
investigating coping and adaption among older HIV-infected adults).
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 7/1/96 → 12/31/98 |
Funding
- National Institute on Aging
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Infectious Diseases
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