Alexithymia, Assertiveness and Psychosocial Functioning in HIV: Implications for Medication Adherence and Disease Severity

被引:0
作者
Roger C. McIntosh
Gail Ironson
Michael Antoni
Mary Ann Fletcher
Neil Schneiderman
机构
[1] University of Miami,Department of Health Psychology
[2] Nova Southeastern University,Department of Clinical Immunology, Institute of Neuro Immune Medicine
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2016年 / 20卷
关键词
HIV/AIDS; Adherence; Alexithymia; Assertiveness; Psychosocial function; SIDA; la adherencia; la alexitimia; la asertividad; la función del VIH/psicosocial;
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摘要
Psychosocial function and adherence to antiretroviral regimen are key factors in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease management. Alexithymia (AL) is a trait deficit in the ability to identify and describe feelings, emotions and bodily sensations. A structural equation model was used to test whether high levels of AL indirectly relate to greater non-adherent behavior and HIV disease severity via psychosocial dysfunction. Blood draws for HIV-1 viral load and CD4 T-lymphocyte, along with psychosocial surveys were collected from 439 HIV positive adults aged 18–73 years. The structural model supports significant paths from: (1) AL to non-active patient involvement, psychological distress, and lower social support, (2) psychological distress and non-active involvement to non-adherent behavior, and (3) non-adherence to greater HIV disease severity (CFI = .97, RMSEA = .04, SRMR = .05). A second model confirmed the intermediary effect of greater patient assertiveness on the path from AL to social support and non-active patient involvement (CFI = .94, RMSEA = .04, SRMR = .05). Altogether, AL is indirectly linked with HIV disease management through it's association with poor psychosocial function, however greater patient assertiveness buffers the negative impact of AL on relationship quality with healthcare providers and members of one's social support network.
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页码:325 / 338
页数:13
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