Nutritional Risk and Health-Related Quality of Life in Older Adults Aging With HIV

Due to antiretroviral treatment success, individuals with HIV are living longer. People aging with HIV (PAWH, 50+) may be more likely to experience nutritional risk compared to their HIV-negative counterparts due to biopsychosocial factors. The DETERMINE checklist measure accounts for social and eco...

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Veröffentlicht in:Innovation in aging 2021-12, Vol.5 (Supplement_1), p.946-946
Hauptverfasser: Viviano, Nicole, Gruber-Baldini, Ann, Schmalzle, Sarah, Stafford, Kristen, Chard, Sarah, Mohanty, Kareshma, Parker, Elizabeth, Eke, Uzoamaka
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Due to antiretroviral treatment success, individuals with HIV are living longer. People aging with HIV (PAWH, 50+) may be more likely to experience nutritional risk compared to their HIV-negative counterparts due to biopsychosocial factors. The DETERMINE checklist measure accounts for social and economic factors as well as aspects of the aging process that are not typically considered when examining nutritional risk and are important for PAWH. The current study examined nutritional risk and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in PAWH using the DETERMINE checklist and PROMIS t-scores (mental and physical HRQoL) through secondary analyses of 158 participants in the Strengthening Therapeutic Resources in Older patients agiNG with HIV (STRONG) study. DETERMINE nutritional risk scores (0-21) were separated into 4 groups (low-risk [0-2, n=13], moderate-risk [3-5, n=28], high-risk [6-12, n=78], very high-risk [13-21, n=39]). The sample was 55% male, 94% Black/African American and had a mean age=59 (SD=5.5). Most of the sample (74%) were at high or very high nutritional risk and low HRQoL t-score: physical M=43.7 (SD=9.5), and mental M=45.7 (SD=10.1). Mental and physical HRQoL were significantly (p
ISSN:2399-5300
2399-5300
DOI:10.1093/geroni/igab046.3418