Publication | Closed Access
Stigma and Psychological Distress in People With HIV/AIDS
140
Citations
48
References
2013
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesStigmatizationFelt StigmaMental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologyPublic HealthMinority StressVulnerable Patient PopulationPsychological DistressSocial StigmaPsychiatryMental Health StigmaSexual StigmaPsychosocial FactorHivSocietal StigmaPsychosocial ResearchSexual HealthTreatment And PreventionStigma StudiesMedicinePsychopathologyNegative Feelings
Using a community sample of 197 people living with HIV/AIDS, we examined how awareness of societal stigma (felt stigma) and negative feelings toward oneself as a member of a stigmatized group (self-stigma) are related to psychological well-being. Both felt stigma and self-stigma were significantly correlated with symptoms of depression and anxiety, but controlling for felt stigma reduced self-stigma's association with depressive symptoms to nonsignificance. Global self-esteem and social avoidance fully mediated the associations between self-stigma and distress but only partially mediated the associations between felt stigma and distress. Felt stigma mediated the relationship between distress and HIV-related changes in physical appearance.
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