TY - JOUR KW - Spirituality KW - Social Support KW - Social stigma KW - Resilience, Psychological KW - Qualitative Research KW - Photography KW - Patient Education as Topic KW - Medication adherence KW - Male KW - Interviews as Topic KW - Humans KW - HIV Seropositivity KW - Female KW - Ethiopia KW - Community health workers KW - Adult AU - Hussen SA AU - Tsegaye M AU - Argaw MG AU - Andes K AU - Gilliard D AU - Rio C AB -

People living with HIV (PLHIV) in Ethiopia and other developing nations face numerous challenges to their health and well-being, including poverty, limited healthcare infrastructure and high levels of societal stigma. Despite these challenges, resilient trajectories have been observed even within such resource-limited settings. In Ethiopia, such resilience is exemplified by the 'Expert Patients (EPTs)', HIV-positive lay health workers who function as adherence counsellors, health educators, outreach workers and community advocates. We conducted a multi-method qualitative study with 20 EPTs in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in order to understand pathways to resilience in this selected population. Participants described three key mechanisms of resilient coping: (1) the use of spirituality and faith-based practices to manage psychological difficulties associated with living with HIV; (2) utilisation of social capital from family and community networks as a buffer against the psychological and economic consequences of societal stigma; and (3) serving others as a mechanism for finding optimism and purpose in life. Interventions designed to facilitate and/or augment these social processes in the wider community may be promising strategies for improving health among PLHIV in Ethiopia and other resource-limited settings.

BT - Global public health C1 -

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24520996?dopt=Abstract

DO - 10.1080/17441692.2014.880501 IS - 3 J2 - Glob Public Health LA - eng N2 -

People living with HIV (PLHIV) in Ethiopia and other developing nations face numerous challenges to their health and well-being, including poverty, limited healthcare infrastructure and high levels of societal stigma. Despite these challenges, resilient trajectories have been observed even within such resource-limited settings. In Ethiopia, such resilience is exemplified by the 'Expert Patients (EPTs)', HIV-positive lay health workers who function as adherence counsellors, health educators, outreach workers and community advocates. We conducted a multi-method qualitative study with 20 EPTs in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in order to understand pathways to resilience in this selected population. Participants described three key mechanisms of resilient coping: (1) the use of spirituality and faith-based practices to manage psychological difficulties associated with living with HIV; (2) utilisation of social capital from family and community networks as a buffer against the psychological and economic consequences of societal stigma; and (3) serving others as a mechanism for finding optimism and purpose in life. Interventions designed to facilitate and/or augment these social processes in the wider community may be promising strategies for improving health among PLHIV in Ethiopia and other resource-limited settings.

PY - 2014 SP - 286 EP - 98 T2 - Global public health TI - Spirituality, social capital and service: factors promoting resilience among Expert Patients living with HIV in Ethiopia. UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4033693/pdf/nihms564006.pdf VL - 9 SN - 1744-1706 ER -