Medical mistrust of health systems as a moderator of resilience and self-reported HIV care engagement in Black and Latinx young adults living with HIV
To study resilience and its association with HIV care engagement in a sample of young adult Black and Latinx people living with HIV (PLWH) in the United States and to test if a systems-level barrier, medical mistrust, would moderate the resilience-engagement association. Between April and August 202...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology 2023-08 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | To study resilience and its association with HIV care engagement in a sample of young adult Black and Latinx people living with HIV (PLWH) in the United States and to test if a systems-level barrier, medical mistrust, would moderate the resilience-engagement association.
Between April and August 2021, we recruited participants through social media and dating apps (
= 212) and verified age and HIV status through a review process of digital text-messaged and emailed photos. Participants completed a one-time online survey consisting of the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale, The Index of Engagement in HIV Care, and the Medical Mistrust Index. We ran a regression-based moderation analysis using the Johnson-Neyman Technique to estimate regions of significance.
The sample (
= 212) was 80.5% Black and 19.5% Latinx with a mean age of 25.8 years (
= 2.84). Higher resilience scores were associated with higher HIV care engagement scores (
= 0.72,
= .003), and medical mistrust moderated this relationship as evidenced by a mistrust by resilience interaction (
= -0.16,
= .01). Our regions of statistical significance showed that as mistrust increased, the size of the resilience-engagement association decreased.
Resilience may be a protective factor associated with greater participation and sense of connection to HIV care, but is diminished by mistrust of the medical system at large. This suggest that systems-level changes, in addition to individual-level interventions, are needed to address medical mistrust to fully harness the resilience of young PLWH. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved). |
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ISSN: | 1099-9809 1939-0106 |
DOI: | 10.1037/cdp0000615 |