Coping among HIV negative and hiv positive female injection drug users

David W. Brook, Judith S. Brook, Martin Whiteman, Josephine Roberto, Joseph R. Masci, Frances Amundsen, Jacques De Catalogne

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

The study examined the psychosocial determinants of coping ability in a cohort of 249 HIV positive and HIV negative female injection drug users (IDUs), using a cross-sectional retrospective design. Information collected using a structured questionnaire included data on psychosocial risk and protective factors in the personality, family, and peer domains, HIV status, and coping ability. Coping ability was associated with conventionality, greater control of emotions, less psychopathology, and family cohesion in both HIV positive and HIV negative subjects. The psychosocial factors affected coping in HIV positive and HIV negative IDUs via two different mediational models. The interactional findings supported the influence of risk/protective interactions in both groups. The findings demonstrate the impact of the interplay between personality factors and external support on coping ability in female IDUs.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)262-273
Number of pages12
JournalAIDS Education and Prevention
Volume11
Issue number3
StatePublished - Jun 1999

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