Social Support and Violence-prone Relationships as Predictors of Disclosure of HIV Status Among Newly Diagnosed HIV-positive South Africans.
Jocelyn FifieldLucia O'SullivanElizabeth A KelvinJoanne E MantellTheresa ExnerGita RamjeeKelly BlanchardSusie HoffmanPublished in: AIDS and behavior (2019)
Despite the salience of social support and violence as potential outcomes of disclosure, how pre-existing social support and relationship violence among people living with HIV shapes and influences HIV status disclosure has received limited attention. Following the Disclosure Process Model, this study investigated pre-disclosure support and violence-prone relationships as predictors of disclosure using data from a prospective study of 459 newly diagnosed South African women and men. Most (88%) disclosed their status to at least one person by their 8-month interview. Level of social support was unrelated to disclosure to a partner. However, those with higher levels of support had higher odds of disclosing to family and to others. Women in violence-prone relationships were more likely to report disclosure to a partner than were those not in such relationships, counter to expectations. The findings suggest that the same mechanisms may not explain processes of disclosure across all relationship types.
Keyphrases
- social support
- depressive symptoms
- hiv positive
- mental health
- newly diagnosed
- antiretroviral therapy
- men who have sex with men
- hiv testing
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv infected
- hepatitis c virus
- south africa
- hiv aids
- pregnant women
- machine learning
- skeletal muscle
- risk assessment
- intimate partner violence
- working memory
- pregnancy outcomes
- weight loss
- functional connectivity