AI Article Synopsis

  • A growing number of young adults with perinatally acquired HIV (PAH) are navigating the challenges of intimate relationships while facing additional stressors related to their condition.
  • The study explored how these individuals manage the complexities of disclosing their HIV status to partners, revealing common themes such as the timing of disclosure and the use of protective measures to avoid revealing their status.
  • Findings indicate a strong impact of HIV disclosure on relationship experiences, highlighting the need for interventions to support young adults with PAH and more research that includes diverse populations and settings.

Article Abstract

An increasing number of children born with perinatally acquired HIV (PAH) are surviving into late adolescence and early adulthood. At this developmental stage, forming and sustaining intimate relationships is important. Young adults with PAH face both normative challenges and additional, HIV-related, relationship stressors. One key issue is the decision about whether and how to share their HIV status with others. Being able to disclose one's HIV status to sexual partners may reduce the risk of onward HIV transmission but is associated with the fear of rejection. There has been little research on how young people with PAH manage such disclosure-related stressors in intimate relationships. This study examined how disclosure challenges are managed by young adults with PAH in the UK within their intimate relationships. Seven participants (five females and two males) currently or previously in an intimate relationship, aged 18-23 years, were recruited from a UK hospital clinic. The majority of participants were of sub-Saharan African origins. They took part in in-depth interviews, with data analysed according to the principles of interpretative phenomenological analysis. Four themes were elicited: (1) decisions about starting, continuing or resuming relationships shaped by disclosure, (2) disclosing early to avoid the pain of future rejection, (3) using condoms to avoid disclosure and (4) testing likely partner reactions to disclosure. The study revealed the significant extent to which HIV disclosure affected the experience of relationships in this population. Interventions to support adolescents and young adults with PAH to disclose to their partners should be developed alongside guidance for professionals. Future research should include older samples of adults with PAH and studies in sub-Saharan African settings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09540121.2015.1093594DOI Listing

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