Cultural Predictors of Self-Esteem Among Black Women With Criminal Justice Involvement and Herpes Simplex Virus.
Natalie MaloneJardin N Dogan-DixonShemeka Y ThorpeShawndaya S ThrasherParis WheelerDanelle Stevens-WatkinsCarrie B OserPublished in: Health promotion practice (2023)
Black women have disproportionately alarming HSV-2 infection rates yet receive little attention in sexual health literature. Using a strengths-based resilience framework, this study sought to determine culturally relevant protective predictors of self-esteem for Black women who are justice-involved and have HSV-2. The authors conducted secondary data analysis on data from the "Black Women in the Study of Epidemics (B-WISE) Project," a longitudinal prospective study investigating health disparities and health services utilization among Black women with justice involvement. At baseline, N = 151 Black women with HSV-2 who were incarcerated or on probation completed survey measures assessing self-esteem, ethnic identity affirmation and belonging, perceived social support, and John Henryism Active Coping. Hierarchical linear regression analyses revealed ethnic identity affirmation and belonging and John Henryism Active Coping were significant predictors of self-esteem at 6-month follow-up. Implications are provided for current health professionals.
Keyphrases
- social support
- herpes simplex virus
- depressive symptoms
- data analysis
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- mental health
- systematic review
- working memory
- healthcare
- climate change
- mental illness
- metabolic syndrome
- cervical cancer screening
- single cell
- adipose tissue
- pregnant women
- machine learning
- quality improvement
- risk assessment