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Published online before print December 13, 2006
Psychosom Med 2006, doi:10.1097/01.psy.0000249900.34885.46
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© 2006 by American Psychosomatic Society

Original Article


Received December 8, 2005
Returned for revision July 28, 2006

Disclosure of HIV Status and Sexual Orientation Independently Predicts Increased Absolute CD4 Cell Counts Over Time for Psychiatric Patients

Eric D. Strachan , PhD, W. R. Murray Bennett , MD, FRCPC, Joan Russo , PhD, Peter P. Roy-Byrne , MD


Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Eric D. Strachan, PhD, E-mail: erstrach{at}u.washington.edu.


   Abstract

Objective: The objective of this study was to replicate the relationship between disclosure of sexual orientation and immune functioning in HIV-positive persons and to extend those findings to a different type of disclosure (HIV status) and a different population (psychiatric outpatients in a publicly funded HIV/AIDS clinic). Methods: A sample of psychiatric outpatients (N = 373) from a large, urban HIV clinic was assessed for level of sexual orientation and HIV status disclosure as well as absolute CD4 cell counts over time. Mixed-effects random regression analysis was used to build a predictor model that included biobehavioral covariates. Results: Consistent disclosure of both sexual orientation and HIV status independently predicted increased CD4 cell counts over time controlling for important biobehavioral covariates. The only other significant effects in the model were baseline CD4 cell count and number of days between assessment of disclosure and assessment of CD4 cell count. Conclusions: Relieving potential psychological distress by disclosing sexual orientation and HIV status has a positive impact on CD4 cell counts over time even among outpatients stressed by psychiatric illness and economic disadvantage. Additional research is needed to understand whether and under what conditions disclosure should be part of HIV disease management.

Key Words: psychological inhibition, CD4 cell counts, mixed-effects random regression, HIV, sexual orientation.




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L. R. Temoshok, R. L. Wald, S. Synowski, and A. Garzino-Demo
Coping as a Multisystem Construct Associated With Pathways Mediating HIV-Relevant Immune Function and Disease Progression
Psychosom Med, June 1, 2008; 70(5): 555 - 561.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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