How Does Stigma Affect People Living with HIV? The Mediating Roles of Internalized and Anticipated HIV Stigma in the Effects of Perceived Community Stigma on Health and Psychosocial Outcomes

被引:0
|
作者
Bulent Turan
Henna Budhwani
Pariya L. Fazeli
Wesley R. Browning
James L. Raper
Michael J. Mugavero
Janet M. Turan
机构
[1] University of Alabama at Birmingham,The Department of Psychology
[2] University of Alabama at Birmingham,Department of Health Care Organization and Policy, School of Public Health
[3] School of Nursing,Department of Family, Community, and Health Systems
[4] University of Alabama at Birmingham,The Department of Medicine
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2017年 / 21卷
关键词
HIV; Stigma; Internalized stigma; Perceived community stigma; Anticipated stigma; Mechanisms; Mediation;
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学科分类号
摘要
Few researchers have attempted to examine the mechanisms through which HIV-related stigma in the community is processed and experienced at an individual level by people living with HIV. We examined how the effects of perceived HIV stigma in the community on health outcomes for people living with HIV are mediated by internalized stigma and anticipated stigma. Participants (N = 203) from an HIV clinic completed self-report measures and their clinical data were obtained from medical records. Results suggested that the association between perceived community stigma and affective, cognitive, and mental health outcomes (self-esteem, depressive symptoms, avoidance coping, self-blame) are mediated by internalized stigma. Furthermore, a serial mediation model suggested that perceived community stigma leads to internalized stigma, which leads to anticipated community stigma, which in turn leads to lower medication adherence. The associations between perceived community stigma and interpersonal outcomes (social support, trust in physicians) were mediated by internalized stigma and anticipated stigma, again in a serial fashion (perceived community stigma leads to internalized stigma, which leads to anticipated stigma, which in turn leads to interpersonal outcomes). These results suggest that perceived HIV-related stigma in the community may cause people living with HIV to internalize stigma and anticipate stigmatizing experiences, resulting in adverse health and psychosocial outcomes—information that can be used to shape interventions.
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页码:283 / 291
页数:8
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