Title: Spirituality
1Spirituality the HIV Positive Woman
- Deborah Phillips, RN, MPH
- TX/OK AIDS Education Training Center
- Dallas, TX
2Spirit-definition
- pneuma (Greek)- breath
- Immaterial being
- Searches for relationship with God
3Caring for the whole person
4Objective
- Describe 6 considerations regarding
spirituality when caring for the HIV Positive
Woman
5Consideration 1 Spirituality in Healthcare
Literature
- Healthcare Spirituality articles increasing in
abundance - 1981 1 article
- 1991 22
- 1999 57
- Western Journal of Nursing Research, 2004, 26(4),
405-428
6Consideration 1 Spirituality in Healthcare
Literature
- Not well-defined
- Embedded in culture
- Cannot be separated as individual entity for study
7Consideration 1 Spirituality in Healthcare
Literature
- 79.5 from the U.S.
- 52.1 quantitative design
- 62.8 studies of clients or patients
- 78 adults
- Primarily r/t Cancer medical treatments
8Consideration 2Personal Beliefs
- What do I believe?
- What can I do for my patient?
9Consideration 3 Inherent Challenges of the HIV
Positive Woman
- Faces Stigma
- Race
- Gender
- Class
- Presumed HIV status
10Consideration 3 Inherent Challenges of the HIV
Positive Woman
- Stigma
- About 20 of U.S. population
- In conjunction with other stigmas
- Homosexuality, bisexuality, IDU
- More likely w/ certain religious beliefs
- More likely if less educated
- Stigma and HIV/AIDS
- A Review of the Literature, May 2003 DRAFT
Deborah L. Brimlow, Ph.D., Jennifer S. Cook, and
Richard Seaton, editors U.S. DHHS, HRSA, HAB
11Consideration 3 Inherent Challenges of the HIV
Positive Woman
- Faces Loss
- Body Image
- significant feelings of contamination due to
internalization of stigma and representations, in
addition to physical decline. - Body image and HIV implications for support and
care. AIDS Care. 1998 Jun10 Suppl 2S179-87.
12Consideration 3 Inherent Challenges of the HIV
Positive Woman
- Faces Loss
- Employment loss
- frequent from the first months of HIV infection
- occurs especially in women and in patients with
adverse socioeconomic conditions, and - severe HIV infection and/or comorbidity.
- The European Journal of Public Health 2006
16(1)89-95 doi10.1093/eurpub/cki153
13Consideration 3 Inherent Challenges of the HIV
Positive Woman
- Depression is common
- As many as 1 in 3 HIV
- Can affect mind, mood, body behavior
- Often misinterpreted
- National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
www.nimh.gov/accessed 4-28-06
14Consideration 4 Regard Her Perspective
- Psychological Spiritual Growth in HIV Positive
Women - 34 HIV positive pts
- 26 53 y.o.
- 1/3 knew HIV status gt 5 years
- 1/3 employed
- 1/3 in relationship with HIV partner
- Diverse ethnicities Hawaiian, Filipina, Chinese,
Portuguese, Japanese, Hispanic, African American - Dunbar,et al, Social Work/vol 43, no 2, March 1998
15Consideration 4Regard Her Perspective
- 82 affirmed positive outcomes
- Rebuilt relationships
- Newfound values
- New sense of meaning and purpose
- Profound self-awareness
- Self acceptance
- Discoveries of connections with nature, God
higher powers
16Consideration 5Implications of Spiritual
Health
- 142 HIV Puerto Rican women in NYC
- High CES-D scores
- 66 above normal threshold
- A series of simultaneous multiple regression
analyses - Controlling for confounding variables
- Simoni JM, Ortiz MZ.Mediational models of
spirituality and depressive symptomatology among
HIV-positive Puerto Rican women. J Assoc Nurses
AIDS Care. 2004 May-Jun15(3)37-46
17Consideration 5Implications of Spiritual
Health
- Most respondents (71) were Catholic
- 29 considered themselves members of a church or
other place of worship - and 30 reported attending religious services
1-3 times a month.
18Consideration 5Implications of Spiritual
Health
- spirituality was high and negatively associated
with CES-D scores - demonstrated that both mastery and self-esteem
scores mediated this relationship
19Consideration 5Implications of Spiritual
Health
- Morse et al., 2000
- Negative relationship between
- Attending church services and use of alcohol or
marijuana - Frequency of prayer and street drugs
- Journal of Religion and Health Volume 39, Number
3 Date September 2000 261 - 276
20Consideration 5Implications of Spiritual
Health
- Coleman, 2003
- African American men and women
- Spirituality related
- Positively to cognitive and social functioning
- Negatively to HIV symptoms
21Consideration 6Take care of YOUR health
- Kristeller, et al 1999
- 37 of oncologists 47 of oncology nurses feel
responsible for addressing spiritual distress
22Consideration 6Take care of YOUR health
- If you have nothing left for yourself, you have
nothing left to give
23SummaryS.P.I.R.I.T.
- Spirit-immaterial being searches for God
- Personal beliefs
- Inherent challenges
- Regard her perspective
- Implications of spiritual health
- Take care of yourself