A Mixed-Methods Study Supporting a Model of Chinese Parental HIV Disclosure

被引:0
|
作者
Joyce P. Yang
Tianyi Xie
Jane M. Simoni
Cheng-Shi Shiu
Wei-ti Chen
Hongxin Zhao
Hongzhou Lu
机构
[1] University of Washington,Department of Psychology
[2] Utah State University,Department of Psychology
[3] University of Washington,School of Social Work
[4] Yale University,School of Nursing
[5] Capital Medical University,Beijing Ditan Hospital
[6] Fudan University,Shanghai Public Health Clinical Center
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2016年 / 20卷
关键词
HIV/AIDS; Disclosure; Parents; Children; China;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Parents who are HIV-positive confront difficult decisions regarding whether, when, and how to disclose their HIV status to their children. In China, a setting of acute HIV stigma where family harmony is culturally valued, limited research has been conducted on parental disclosure. We aimed to develop a model of parental disclosure that accounts for the cultural context in China based on a mixed-methods study. In our individual, in-depth interviews (N = 24) as well as survey data (N = 84) collected from parents living with HIV in Shanghai and Beijing, we found the primary barriers to disclosure were stigma, fear of exposing the mode by which they acquired HIV, psychologically burdening the child, rejection by the child, and negative social consequences for the family. Parents concurrently cited many motivations for disclosure, such as disease progression, ensuring safety of the child, gaining assistance, and fulfilling their parental responsibility. Most parents had not actively disclosed their HIV status (68 %); many parents reported some form of partial disclosure (e.g., sharing they have a blood disease but not labeling it HIV), unplanned disclosure, or unintentional disclosure to their children by other people. Findings informed the development of a Chinese Parental HIV Disclosure Model, with primary components accounting for distal cultural factors, decision-making (balancing approach and avoid motivations), the disclosure event, and outcomes resulting from the disclosure. This model highlights the cultural context of the Chinese parental disclosure process, and may be useful in guiding future observational research and intervention work.
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页码:165 / 173
页数:8
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