The Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care : JANAC
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J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care · May 1998
Understanding barriers to condom usage among HIV-infected African American women.
Drawing on focus group discussions with adolescent and adult HIV-infected women between the ages of 16 and 45, this study explores the barriers to condom use among women infected with HIV. Although most of the participants were comfortable discussing condoms and sexuality, there was little, if any, negotiation of condom use with their male partners. Most of the participants used condoms inconsistently or not at all. ⋯ Women in discordant relationships explained their uninfected partner's refusal to use condoms as denial of the risk of contracting HIV or as a way of expressing their love for the infected partner. Women also had great difficulty in disclosing their HIV status to both family and partners. Prevention efforts to increase condom use among HIV-infected women should target both men and women and focus on negotiation and communication skills.
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J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care · Nov 1997
Comparative StudyCorrelates of spiritual well-being in terminally ill persons with AIDS and terminally ill persons with cancer.
In an effort to determine if terminally ill patients with AIDS had greater religious and spiritual care needs than other terminally ill patient populations, particularly those with cancer, a study was conducted in a community-based hospice in the southeast. The purpose of the study was to compare the perceptions of spiritual well-being, loneliness, social support, health hardiness, pain, and functional status among terminally ill clients with cancer and terminally ill clients with AIDS in a hospice setting and to examine predictors of spiritual well-being in a hospice population. A sample of 55 hospice patients completed the Correlates of Spiritual Well-Being Scale (COSWEB), which includes a demographic data sheet and instruments to measure spiritual well-being, loneliness, health hardiness, social support, functional status, and pain. ⋯ The results of this study suggest differences between specific groups of hospice patients. Patients with AIDS may be less spiritually well than other terminally ill patient populations due to decreased support systems, dissatisfaction with supports, greater feelings of loneliness, younger ages on entry to hospice, fewer family supports, lack of recognized long-term relationships, and related issues such as homophobia, perceived rejection by religious denominations, unstable living environments, economic disadvantages, and less time to process life events/meaning. Findings in this study and similar future studies can better enable health care providers to allocate time and resources to various terminally ill patient populations to achieve higher quality care outcomes in general and greater spiritual well-being in particular.