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    Brain Behav Immun. 2009 Jul;23(5):693-9. Epub 2009 Jan 21.

    Men's serostatus disclosure to parents: associations among social support, ethnicity, and disease status in men living with HIV.

    Source

    Department of Psychology, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33146, USA. efekete@psy.miami.edu

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND:

    Directly disclosing a positive HIV serostatus to family members can affect psychological and disease status. Perceptions that one is in a supportive family environment may moderate these effects; however, ethnic differences may exist in the support processes of families coping with HIV.

    METHODS:

    We examined the role of serostatus disclosure to parents, HIV-specific family support, and ethnicity (Latino versus non-Hispanic White) in explaining disease status (HIV Viral Load, CD4+ cell count) in a sample of men living with HIV (MLWH). Men (n=120) reported whether they had disclosed their serostatus to their mothers and fathers, rated their perceptions of HIV-specific social support received from family members, and provided morning peripheral venous blood samples to assess immune function. We also collected psychosocial and urinary neuroendocrine indicators of stress/distress as possible mediator variables.

    RESULTS:

    A three-way interaction emerged between serostatus disclosure to mothers, HIV-specific family support, and ethnicity in explaining both viral load and CD4+ cell count. Non-Hispanic White men who had disclosed to mothers and were receiving high family support had a lower viral load and higher CD4+ cell count, but Latino men who had disclosed to mothers and were receiving low family support had a higher viral load. These associations were not accounted for by men's medication adherence, psychological distress, or neuroendocrine hormones. Disclosure to fathers was not related to disease status.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    The effects of serostatus disclosure on disease status may depend, in part, on ethnic differences in the interpersonal processes of men's close family relationships.

    PMID:
    19486655
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC2724722
    Free PMC Article

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