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Growing up HIV-positive in Uganda: "psychological immunodeficiency"? A qualitative study

Growing up HIV-positive in Uganda: "psychological immunodeficiency"? A qualitative study

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dc.contributor.author Birthe Loa Knizek
dc.contributor.author James Mugisha
dc.contributor.author Joseph Osafo
dc.contributor.author Eugene Kinyanda
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:46Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:46Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.issn 20507283
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49180
dc.description.abstract This study is part of a longitudinal study among children and adolescents with HIV in both urban and rural Uganda: ‘Mental health among HIV infected CHildren and Adolescents in KAmpala and Masaka, Uganda (CHAKA)’. The study is constructed of both quantitative and qualitative components. In this article we report a qualitative study on the experiences of 21 adolescents (twelve to seventeen years) living with HIV in Uganda. The purpose of the study was to investigate both the protective and the risk factors in HIV-infected adolescents’ care environment in order to understand what might contribute to negative outcomes and what might provide a protective buffer against harmful life events. Semi-structured interviews with vignettes about mental disorders were employed and a phenomenological analysis was done. The findings uncovered that the adolescents’ families were mostly characterized by instability and diffuse relationships that provided an insecure basis for secure attachment and emotional support. Even in stable and secure family environments, there was no guarantee for getting sufficient emotional support in order to develop a positive self-concept due to the fate being the only infected child in the family. Both secure attachment and positive self-concept are known psychological protective mechanisms that provide the individual with resilience. The adolescents in this study seemed hampered in the development of protective mechanisms and consequently seemed psychologically vulnerable and badly equipped for coping with challenges, which paves the way for the possible development of mental disorders. To change the focus towards strengthening the children and adolescents’ development of psychological protective mechanisms implicates a change in focus from illness to health and has consequences for both treatment and prevention. Psychological health promotion must be systemic and aim at strengthening the family environment, but also to establish peer group support.
dc.description.sponsorship Medical Research Council (MC_UP_1204/10) United Kingdom
dc.description.sponsorship Medical Research Council (MR/L004623/1) United Kingdom
dc.publisher BioMed Central
dc.relation.ispartof BMC psychology
dc.subject Adolescence
dc.subject HIV
dc.subject Mental health
dc.subject Uganda
dc.subject.mesh Adaptation, Psychological
dc.subject.mesh Adolescent
dc.subject.mesh Child
dc.subject.mesh Female
dc.subject.mesh HIV Infections/psychology
dc.subject.mesh Humans
dc.subject.mesh Interpersonal Relations
dc.subject.mesh Longitudinal Studies
dc.subject.mesh Male
dc.subject.mesh Mental Disorders/psychology
dc.subject.mesh Mental Health
dc.subject.mesh Qualitative Research
dc.subject.mesh Self Concept
dc.subject.mesh Social Support
dc.subject.mesh Uganda
dc.title Growing up HIV-positive in Uganda: "psychological immunodeficiency"? A qualitative study
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.doi 10.1186/s40359-017-0199-7
dc.identifier.pmid 28841921
dc.identifier.mag 2749965939
dc.identifier.pmc PMC6389182
dc.identifier.lens 064-793-026-649-970
dc.identifier.volume 5
dc.identifier.issue 1
dc.identifier.spage 30
dc.subject.lens-fields Interpretative phenomenological analysis
dc.subject.lens-fields Attachment theory
dc.subject.lens-fields Peer group
dc.subject.lens-fields Mental health
dc.subject.lens-fields Psychological resilience
dc.subject.lens-fields Developmental psychology
dc.subject.lens-fields Psychology
dc.subject.lens-fields Qualitative research
dc.subject.lens-fields Longitudinal study
dc.subject.lens-fields Clinical psychology
dc.subject.lens-fields Coping (psychology)


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