Synopses & Reviews
This NIH-supported study of HIV's physical and psychosocial impacts offers both practical and inspiring accounts of how individuals living with HIV respond and cope with the disease and its progressive stages and impacts. The longitudinal approach of the research and the rich resources offered by extensive interviews with the persons with HIV and those closest to them avail the reader of insights and responses that should improve others' coping and caring abilities. The author's professional experience and extensive research informs the work throughout and fashions a remarkable and moving synthesis of the themes that will help those living with AIDS as well as all who relate to them. From the first awareness of infection to coping with bereavement, this book honestly, sensitively, and substantively addresses the essential concerns that any and all who are touched by the HIV pandemic must reflect on.
Synopsis
This is an immensely sensitive and substantive account of the impacts the AIDS pandemic has had on the individuals living with it and the responses of those who share their lives as family members, loved ones, or professional caregivers. The purpose of the NIH-supported study is to identify physical and psychosocial problems associated with HIV.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [209]-218) and index.
About the Author
MARY ELIZABETH O'BRIEN is a Professor in the School of Nursing at The Catholic University of America.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Preface
The World of HIV Infection
The Study Participants: Choosing to Live with HIV
The Families: The Ties that Bind
The Professional Caregivers
Early Adaptation to HIV
The Survivors: A Typology of Coping Styles in Living with HIV
Coping with Death and Bereavement
Bibliography
Index