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Food insecurity, depression and the modifying role of social support among people living with HIV/AIDS in rural Uganda

机译:乌干达农村地区艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染者中的粮食不安全,抑郁症和社会支持的调节作用

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Depression is common among people living with HIV/AIDS and contributes to a wide range of worsened HIV-related outcomes, including AIDS-related mortality. Targeting modifiable causes of depression, either through primary or secondary prevention, may reduce suffering as well as improve HIV-related outcomes. Food insecurity is a pervasive source of uncertainty for those living in resource-limited settings, and cross-sectional studies have increasingly recognized it as a critical determinant of poor mental health. Using cohort data from 456 men and women living with HIV/AIDS initiating HIV antiretroviral therapy in rural Uganda, we sought to (a) estimate the association between food insecurity and depression symptom severity, (b) assess the extent to which social support may serve as a buffer against the adverse effects of food insecurity, and (c) determine whether the buffering effects are specific to certain types of social support. Quarterly data were collected by structured interviews and blood draws. The primary outcome was depression symptom severity, measured by a modified Hopkins Symptom Checklist for Depression. The primary explanatory variables were food insecurity, measured with the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale, and social support, measured with a modified version of the Functional Social Support Questionnaire. We found that food insecurity was associated with depression symptom severity among women but not men, and that social support buffered the impacts of food insecurity on depression. We also found that instrumental support had a greater buffering influence than emotional social support. Interventions aimed at improving food security and strengthening instrumental social support may have synergistic beneficial effects on both mental health and HIV outcomes among PLWHA in resource-limited settings.
机译:抑郁症在艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染者中很普遍,并导致与艾滋病毒有关的各种后果恶化,包括与艾滋病有关的死亡率。通过一级或二级预防,针对抑郁症的可改变原因,可以减轻痛苦并改善与艾滋病相关的结果。对于生活在资源有限的地区的人们来说,粮食不安全是不确定性的普遍根源,横断面研究越来越认识到,它是不良心理健康的关键因素。利用来自乌干达农村地区456名接受HIV / AIDS的男女发起HIV抗逆转录病毒治疗的队列数据,我们试图(a)估计粮食不安全与抑郁症状严重程度之间的关联,(b)评估社会支持的服务程度作为缓冲粮食不安全不利影响的缓冲,以及(c)确定缓冲作用是否特定于某些类型的社会支持。通过结构化访谈和抽血收集季度数据。主要结果是抑郁症症状的严重程度,通过修改后的霍普金斯抑郁症症状清单进行测量。主要的解释变量是用家庭粮食不安全获取量表衡量的粮食不安全,以及用功能性社会支持问卷的修订版衡量的社会支持。我们发现,粮食不安全与妇女而非男性的抑郁症状严重程度有关,社会支持减轻了粮食不安全对抑郁的影响。我们还发现,工具性支持比情感性社会支持具有更大的缓冲影响。在资源有限的情况下,旨在改善粮食安全和加强社会支持的干预措施可能对艾滋病病毒感染者的心理健康和艾滋病毒后果产生协同有益的影响。

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