Publication | Closed Access
Psychosocial Factors and Medication Adherence in HIV-Positive Youth
116
Citations
7
References
2006
Year
Mental Health InterventionMental HealthSocial SupportAdult Hiv LiteratureAdolescent MedicineMental Health InterventionsYouth Well-beingPublic HealthHealth SciencesTeen Mental HealthPsychiatryPatient SupportHealth PromotionPsychosocial FactorHivSexual HealthMedication AdherenceTreatment And PreventionAdult Mental HealthBehavioral HealthMedicine
The purpose of this study was to test variables consistently identified in the adult HIV literature as predictors of adherence (self-efficacy, social support, and psychological distress) in a sample of 24 HIV-positive youth (ages 16-24). Self-efficacy and psychological distress were significantly correlated with adherence but social support was not. Social support specific to taking medications was correlated with self-efficacy. In regression analysis, both self-efficacy and psychological distress were independently related to adherence and together accounted for 47% of the variance. Results suggest the potential of mental health interventions that boost self-efficacy and reduce psychological distress but require replication with larger samples.
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