Social Support and Violence-prone Relationships as Predictors of Disclosure of HIV Status Among Newly Diagnosed HIV-positive South Africans.
Volume: 22
Issue: 10
Year of Publication: 2019
Abstract summary
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.Study Outcome
Source Link: Visit source
Statistics
Citations : Fact sheet world AIDS day 2017 [Internet] UNAIDS; [cited 2018 March 2]. Available from http://www.unaids.org/sites/default/files/media_asset/UNAIDS_FactSheet_en.pdf.Authors : 8
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1007/s10461-018-2136-zSSN : 1573-3254