The role of illness, resources, appraisal, and coping strategies in adjustment to HIV/AIDS: The direct and buffering effects


Autoria(s): Pakenham, KI; Rinaldis, M
Data(s)

01/01/2001

Resumo

This study examined the utility of a stress and coping model of adjustment to HIV/AIDS. A total of 114 HN-infected gay or bisexual men were interviewed and they completed self-administered scales. Predictors included illness variables (disease stage and number of symptoms), coping resources (optimism and social support), appraisal (threat, challenge, and controllability), and coping strategies (problem-and emotion-focused). Adjustment outcomes were depression, global distress, social adjustment, and subjective health status. Results from hierarchical regression analyses indicated that better adjustment was related to an asymptomatic illness stage, fewer HN-related symptoms, greater social support, challenge and controllability appraisals, problem-focused coping, and lower threat appraisals and reliance on emotion focused coping. There was limited support for the stress-buffering effects of optimism. Findings support the utility of a stress and coping model of adjustment to HIV/AIDS.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:59054

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Kluwer Academic - Plenum Publishers

Palavras-Chave #Psychology, Clinical #Hiv/aids #Illness #Coping Resources #Appraisal #Coping Strategies #Adjustment #Quality-of-life #Hiv Disease Continuum #Social Support #Gay Men #Psychological Distress #Depressive Symptoms #Psychosocial Adjustment #Psychometric Properties #Dispositional Optimism #Seropositive Men #C1 #380107 Health, Clinical and Counselling Psychology #780108 Behavioural and cognitive sciences
Tipo

Journal Article