Exposure to COVID-19 Pandemic-Related Stressors and Their Association With Distress, Psychological Growth and Drug Use in People With HIV in Nouvelle Aquitaine, France (ANRS CO3 AQUIVIH-NA Cohort-QuAliV-QuAliCOV Study)

Archive ouverte

Ben Farhat, Jihane | Hessamfar, Mojgan | Neau, Didier | Farbos, Sophie | Lazaro, Estibaliz | Duffau, Pierre | Rouanes, Nicolas | Cazanave, Charles | Pistone, Thierry | Rispal, Patrick | Vandenhende, Marie-Anne | Krzyzanowsky, Camille | Leleux, Olivier | Wittkop, Linda | Bonnet, Fabrice | Barger, Diana

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. We investigated people living with HIV (PLWH)'s exposure to COVID-19 pandemic stressors and their association with distress, psychological growth, and substance use. PLWH in the ANRS CO3 AQUIVIH-NA cohort's QuAliV study (Nouvelle Aquitaine, France) completed an adapted CAIR Lab Pandemic Impact Questionnaire (C-PIQ) and reported substance use between 9/2021 to 3/2022. We described cumulative stressor exposure (score 0-16) and explored variation by PLWH characteristics (demographic, HIV-related, risk factors, psychosocial). Associations with distress (score 0-23), psychological growth (score 0-20), and substance use were assessed using regression models. Participants reported exposure to a median of 2 (IQR: 1-4) stressors. Stressor exposure was higher in working-age (<60) and psychosocially vulnerable PLWH. Exposure to an additional stressor correlated with a 0.7-point increase in distress scores (95% C.I. 0.5-1.0, p<0.001), a 0.04-point increase (95% C.I. 0.01-0.07, p=0.002) in psychological growth scores in working-age PLWH. In older PLWH, additional stressor correlated with a 0.8-point (95% C.I. 0.4-1.2, p<0.001) increase in distress and a 0.1-point increase (95% C.I. 0.06-0.2, p=0.001) in growth scores. Each additional stressor was associated with 1.2 (95% C.I. 1.0-1.4, p=0.02) higher adjusted odds of cannabis use in working-age PLWH, and 1.2 (95% C.I. 1.0-1.4, p=0.004) higher adjusted odds of drug use. Exposure to stressors was linked to increased distress, cannabis and drug use but also growth. Providers should not only be aware of risk (of severe COVID-19) but also be mindful of the social and psychological challenges PLWH face as these may affect their retention in care, especially during challenging times.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Time to treatment initiation and HIV viral suppression in people diagnosed with HIV-1 during COVID-19 pandemic in ex-Aquitaine, France (ANRS CO3 AQUIVIH-NA Cohort-QuAliCOV Study)

Archive ouverte | Ben Farhat, Jihane | CCSD

International audience. The Covid-19 pandemic's impact on initiation and effectiveness of antiretroviral therapy (ART) in people diagnosed with HIV remains unclear. We evaluated critical delays in HIV care in people...

Effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on ART initiation and access to HIV viral load monitoring in adults living with HIV in West Africa: a regression discontinuity analysis

Archive ouverte | Ben Farhat, Jihane | CCSD

International audience. OBJECTIVES: Efforts to control the COVID-19 pandemic have potentially compromised the availability and/or quality of HIV services. We aimed to assess the pandemic's impact on ART initiation a...

Factors associated with poorer quality of life in people living with HIV in southwestern France in 2018-2020 (ANRS CO3 AQUIVIH-NA cohort: QuAliV study)

Archive ouverte | Barger, Diana | CCSD

International audience. We evaluated people living with Human Immunodeficiency Virus' (PLWH) quality of life (QoL) and assessed whether their demographic, disease-related, socioeconomic, or behavioral characteristic...

Chargement des enrichissements...