Women Alive - 2000Important note: Information in this article was accurate in December 2000. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
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Issues Faced by Women with AIDS

Women Alive; Fall / Winter 2000
Khadeja Noorullah

Introduction

The objective of this survey was to examine the most important issues faced by women living with an HIV and/or AIDS diagnosis. Differences and similarities amongst women of different age groups, ethnicities, and regions of the U.S. were also explored.

Methods

The survey was conducted at the 1999 National Conference on Women and HIV/AIDS held in Los Angeles from October 9-12, 1999. This conference marked the largest gathering of HIV-positive women, ever. (900 to 1,000 HIV positive women.) These women came from almost every state in the U.S. and were recruited through HIV/AIDS organizations, advertising in magazines for people living with HIV/AIDS, and word-of-mouth. The survey was administered to the HIV-positive women attending the pre-conference events. A total of 540 out of the 700 pre-conference participants completed the questionnaire (77% response rate).

To allow for a broad range in responses, the self-administered questionnaire consisted of two open-ended questions: "What is the most important issue you face as a person living with HIV/AIDS?" and "What is the most important issue you face as a woman living with HIV/AIDS?" Information on age, race and state of residence were also collected.

A review of the literature on quality of life among persons living with HIV/AIDS was conducted to best determine the categories with which to organize the responses in this survey to facilitate data analysis. In general, the studies reviewed utilized the MOS-HIV, MQOL-HIV, and McGill QOL, and examined quality of life within the following domains: physical health/functioning, mental/emotional health, social functioning and spiritual well-being. (Cohen et al., 1996; Carretero et al., 1996; Badia et al., 1999.)

Based on the quality of life categories identified in the literature and a review of the responses obtained in this study, the following eight categories were determined to be relevant in the analysis of the responses: (1) Physical health/functioning, (2) Medical/health care, (3) Mental/emotional/spiritual health, (4) Social functioning/interpersonal issues, (5) Social support, (6) Financial/economic issues, (7) Policy, (8) Education/research.

Analyses

Descriptive statistics were conducted to characterize the demographics of the sample. Chi-square tests were used to compare differences in issues between: women of various race/ethnicities, age groups, and region of the U.S. (i.e., West, Midwest, South, East, Other).

Results

Demographics:

Table 1 shows the demographic characteristics of the sample. The mean age of the respondents was 39.6 years old (range 18-64, SD = 7.8). Fifty-seven percent (57%) were African American, 21% Latina/Hispanic, 18% Caucasian, and 3% Asian American, Native American or Other.

Table 1. Demographic Characteristics (N= 540)
Characteristics %
Age (mean 39.6 + 7.8 years)
18 - 29 years 10
30 - 39 years 39
40 - 49 years 41
50 + years 10
Race/ethnicity
African American 57
Latina/Hispanic 21
Caucasian 18
Asian(PI)/Native American/Other 03
Region
East 41
West 27
South 17
Midwest 15
U.S. Territory 01

Most of the respondents resided in either the East Coast (41%) or West Coast (27%). The states with the greatest number of respondents were New York (28%), California (21%), Illinois (6%) and Texas (5%). Respondents came from every state in the union except Delaware, Nebraska, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Washington, and West Virginia. Chi-square tests indicate that respondents who were African American and Latinas were more likely to be from a West coast state (p<0.001).

T-tests showed no differences in mean age among the different racial/ethnic groups or among the different regions.

Most Important Issue Faced by a Person with HIV/AIDS

The top ranked issues by domain are presented for each ethnicity in Table 2. Five hundred and twenty-nine women completed the question on the most important issue the respondents faced as a person living with HIV/AIDS. Overall, respondents were significantly more likely to choose Physical health/functioning (19%). Medical/health care (18%), Social Functioning/interpersonal (17%), and Financial/economic issues (16%) as most important (p-value<0.001).

Table 2. Ranking of the Most Important Issues Faced As a Person Living with HIV/AIDS -- General Domains by Ethnicity
  African Americans Latinas Caucasians API/NA/Other All Respondents
1. Medical/Health Care Physical Health/Functioning, Social Functioning, and Financial (tie) Physical Health/Functioning Physical Health/Functioning Physical Health/Functioning
2. Physical Health/Functioning   Medical/Health Care Social Functioning and Mental/Emotional Health (tie) Medical/Health Care
3. Social Functioning   Financial   Social Functioning and Financial
4. Financial Mental/Emotional Health Social Functioning Mental/Health Care and Educational/Research (tie)  

Demographic Differences in the Most Important Issue As a Person with HIV/AIDS

Although chi-square analyses did not result in significant differences in the issues faced as a person living with HIV/AIDS by race/ethnicity, age group, or region, there were differences in the most important issues faced as women.

Demographic Differences in the Most Important Issue As a Woman with HIV/AIDS

Although chi-square analyses did not result in significant differences in the most important issues faced as a woman living with HIV/AIDS by race/ethnicity, age group, or region, there were significant differences in the most important issue by race/ethnicity among the respondents from the Western region (p<0.017). Latinas were more likely to mention physical health/functioning issues, African Americans were more likely to mention social functioning/interpersonal issues, and Caucasians were more likely to mention issues such as social support, education/research and policy.

Additionally, the issue the respondent felt was most important as a person living with HIV/AIDS was found to be significantly associated with the most important issue as a woman living with HIV/AIDS (p<0.001). This was true specifically for those who felt that physical health/functioning, medical/health care, or social functioning/interpersonal issues were most important discussion.

References

  1. "Quality of Life in HIV disease as measured by the McGill Quality of Life Questionnaire" S. Robin Cohen, S. Ansar Hassan, Bernard J. Lapointe and Balfour M. Mount. AIDS 1996 Oct;10(12):1421-7

  2. "Reliability and validity of an HIV-specific health-related quality of life measure for use with injecting drug users" Maria D. Carretero, Adrian P. Burgess, Pilar Soler, Miguel Soler and Jose Catalan. AIDS 1996 Dec;10(14):1699-705

  3. "A randomized study comparing instruments for measuring helath-related quality of life in HIV infected patients" Xavier Badia, Daniel Podzamczer, Margarida Garcia, Carmen Lopez-Lavid C, Ezeqwuiel Consiglio and the Spanish MOS-HIV and MQOL-HIV Validation Group. AIDS 1999 Sep 10;13(13):1727-35.

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