Intersectional Stigma, Fear of Negative Evaluation, Depression, and ART Adherence Among Women Living with HIV Who Engage in Substance Use: A Latent Class …

KL Stringer, A Norcini Pala, RL Cook, MC Kempf… - AIDS and Behavior, 2024 - Springer
Abstract Women Living with HIV (WLHIV) who use substances face stigma related to HIV
and substance use (SU). The relationship between the intersection of these stigmas and …

Intersectional stigmas are associated with lower viral suppression rates and antiretroviral therapy adherence among women living with HIV

AN Pala, MC Kempf, D Konkle-Parker, TE Wilson… - Aids, 2022 - journals.lww.com
Objectives: To explore the associations between intersectional poverty, HIV, sex, and racial
stigma, adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART), and viral suppression among women with …

Longitudinal association between internalized HIV stigma and antiretroviral therapy adherence for women living with HIV: the mediating role of depression

B Turan, WS Rice, KB Crockett, M Johnson… - Aids, 2019 - journals.lww.com
Objective: We investigated whether internalized HIV-related stigma predicts adherence to
antiretroviral therapy (ART) longitudinally in women living with HIV in the United States, and …

Buffering internalization of HIV stigma: implications for treatment adherence and depression

B Turan, KB Crockett, A Buyukcan-Tetik… - JAIDS Journal of …, 2019 - journals.lww.com
Background: One mechanism through which social stigma of HIV affects health outcomes for
people living with HIV (PLWH) is through internalization of stigma. However, this …

Mechanisms for the negative effects of internalized HIV-related stigma on antiretroviral therapy adherence in women: the mediating roles of social isolation and …

B Turan, W Smith, MH Cohen, TE Wilson… - JAIDS Journal of …, 2016 - journals.lww.com
Background: Internalization of HIV-related stigma may inhibit a person's ability to manage
HIV disease through adherence to treatment regimens. Studies, mainly with white men, have …

[HTML][HTML] Mechanisms for the negative effects of internalized HIV-related stigma on ART adherence in women: the mediating roles of social isolation and depression

B Turan, W Smith, MH Cohen, TE Wilson… - Journal of acquired …, 2016 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Background Internalization of HIV-related stigma may inhibit a person's ability to manage
HIV disease through adherence to treatment regimens. Studies, mainly with white men, have …

Pathways from HIV-related stigma, racial discrimination, and gender discrimination to HIV treatment outcomes among women living with HIV in Canada: longitudinal …

K Malama, CH Logie, N Sokolovic… - JAIDS Journal of …, 2023 - journals.lww.com
Background: HIV-related stigma, gender discrimination, and racial discrimination harm
mental health and hamper HIV treatment access for women living with HIV. Maladaptive …

HIV-related stigma and viral suppression among African-American women: exploring the mediating roles of depression and ART nonadherence

L Lipira, EC Williams, D Huh, CG Kemp, PE Nevin… - AIDS and Behavior, 2019 - Springer
We used baseline data from a sample of African-American women living with HIV who were
recruited to participate in a stigma-reduction intervention in Chicago and Birmingham (2013 …

The costs of silencing the self and divided self in the context of physical abuse, racial/ethnic identity, and medication adherence in women living with HIV

D Bruck-Segal, RM Schwartz, MH Cohen, KM Weber… - Sex Roles, 2020 - Springer
Racial/ethnic minority status and physical abuse history are risk factors for higher mortality
rates and lower adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) in women living with HIV (WLWH) …

Discrimination, medical distrust, stigma, depressive symptoms, antiretroviral medication adherence, engagement in care, and quality of life among women living with …

MV Relf, W Pan, A Edmonds, C Ramirez… - JAIDS Journal of …, 2019 - journals.lww.com
Background: Women represent 23% of all Americans living with HIV. By 2020, more than
70% of Americans living with HIV are expected to be 50 years and older. Setting: This study …