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1.
AIDS Care ; 31(7): 803-808, 2019 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30421989

ABSTRACT

We investigated changes in cognitive function and physical health and behavioural outcomes (HIV disease progression, health-seeking behaviour, adherence to HIV medications and risky sexual behaviour) at baseline and 12 months later among 1126 Ugandan adults living with HIV. Overall, cognitive function improved from baseline to follow-up, except for gait speed, which was slower at follow-up compared to baseline. There were improvements in physical health and behavioural outcomes by follow-up, with greater improvements among individuals on ART compared to those not on ART. Change in gait speed over time significantly predicted risky sexual behaviours at follow-up. This is the first study to investigate the longitudinal relationships between cognitive function and health outcomes among Ugandan adults living with HIV and provide insights into the possible links between cognitive function and negative clinical and behavioural health outcomes in people living with HIV.


Subject(s)
Black People/psychology , Cognition/physiology , HIV Infections/psychology , Health Status , Medication Adherence/psychology , Sexual Behavior/psychology , Adult , Aged , Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , Black People/statistics & numerical data , Cohort Studies , Executive Function , Female , HIV Infections/drug therapy , Health Behavior , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Memory, Short-Term , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Risk-Taking , Uganda
2.
Psychol Med ; 48(7): 1139-1147, 2018 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28889814

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Distinguishing temporal patterns of depressive symptoms during pregnancy and after childbirth has important clinical implications for diagnosis, treatment, and maternal and child outcomes. The primary aim of the present study was to distinguish patterns of chronically elevated levels of depressive symptoms v. trajectories that are either elevated during pregnancy but then remit after childbirth, v. patterns that increase after childbirth. METHODS: The report uses latent growth mixture modeling in a large, population-based cohort (N = 12 121) to investigate temporal patterns of depressive symptoms. We examined theoretically relevant sociodemographic factors, exposure to adversity, and offspring gender as predictors. RESULTS: Four distinct trajectories emerged, including resilient (74.3%), improving (9.2%), emergent (4.0%), and chronic (11.5%). Lower maternal and paternal education distinguished chronic from resilient depressive trajectories, whereas higher maternal and partner education, and female offspring gender, distinguished the emergent trajectory from the chronic trajectory. Younger maternal age distinguished the improving group from the resilient group. Exposure to medical, interpersonal, financial, and housing adversity predicted membership in the chronic, emergent, and improving trajectories compared with the resilient trajectory. Finally, exposure to medical, interpersonal, and financial adversity was associated with the chronic v. improving group, and inversely related to the emergent class relative to the improving group. CONCLUSIONS: There are distinct temporal patterns of depressive symptoms during pregnancy, after childbirth, and beyond. Most women show stable low levels of depressive symptoms, while emergent and chronic depression patterns are separable with distinct correlates, most notably maternal age, education levels, adversity exposure, and child gender.


Subject(s)
Depression, Postpartum/diagnosis , Depression/diagnosis , Adult , Diagnosis, Differential , Educational Status , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Maternal Age , Pregnancy , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Resilience, Psychological , Severity of Illness Index , Sex Factors , Stress, Psychological , Time Factors , Young Adult
3.
Eur J Psychotraumatol ; 8(1): 1394146, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29163865

ABSTRACT

Background: Prior research on adaptation after early trauma among black South African women typically assessed resilience in ways that lacked contextual specificity. In addition, the neurocognitive correlates of social and occupational resilience have not been investigated. Objective: The primary aim of this exploratory study was to identify domains of neurocognitive functioning associated with social and occupational resilience, defined as functioning at a level beyond what would be expected given exposure to childhood trauma. Methods: A sample of black South African women, N = 314, completed a neuropsychological battery, a questionnaire assessing exposure to childhood trauma, and self-report measures of functional status. We generated indices of social and occupational resilience by regressing childhood trauma exposure on social and occupational functioning, saving the residuals as indices of social and occupational functioning beyond what would be expected given exposure to childhood trauma. Results: Women with lower non-verbal memory evidenced greater social and occupational resilience above and beyond the effects attributable to age, education, HIV status, and depressive and posttraumatic stress symptoms. In addition, women with greater occupational resilience exhibited lower semantic language fluency and processing speed. Conclusion: Results are somewhat consistent with prior studies implicating memory effects in impairment following trauma, though our findings suggest that reduced abilities in these domains may be associated with greater resilience. Studies that use prospective designs and objective assessment of functional status are needed to determine whether non-verbal memory, semantic fluency, and processing speed are implicated in the neural circuitry of post-traumatic exposure resilience.


Planteamiento: Las investigaciones previas sobre la adaptación después del trauma temprano entre las mujeres negras de Sudáfrica generalmente evaluaban la resiliencia de maneras que carecían de especificidad contextual. Además, no se han investigados los correlatos neurocognitivos de la resiliencia social y ocupacional. Objetivo: El objetivo principal de este estudio exploratorio fue identificar los dominios del funcionamiento neurocognitivo asociados con la resiliencia social y ocupacional, que se define como el funcionamiento en un nivel mayor de lo que se esperaría dada la exposición al trauma infantil. Métodos: Una muestra de mujeres negras sudafricanas, N = 314, completó una batería neuropsicológica, un cuestionario que evaluaba la exposición al trauma infantil y medidas de auto informe de su funcionamiento. Generamos índices de resiliencia social y ocupacional mediante la regresión de la exposición al trauma infantil en el funcionamiento social y laboral, conservando los residuos como índices de funcionamiento social y laboral más allá de lo esperado dada la exposición al trauma infantil. Resultados: Las mujeres con menor memoria no verbal mostraron una mayor resiliencia social y ocupacional por encima y más allá de los efectos atribuibles a la edad, la educación, el estado del VIH y los síntomas de depresión y estrés postraumático. Además, las mujeres con mayor resiliencia ocupacional mostraron menor fluidez del lenguaje semántico y de velocidad de procesamiento. Conclusión: Los resultados son algo consistentes con los estudios previos que implican los efectos de la memoria en el deterioro después del trauma, aunque nuestros hallazgos sugieren que las habilidades reducidas en estos dominios pueden asociarse a una mayor resiliencia. Se necesitan estudios que usen diseños prospectivos y una evaluación objetiva del estado funcional para determinar si la memoria no verbal, la fluidez semántica y la velocidad de procesamiento están implicadas en los circuitos neuronales de la resiliencia a la exposición postraumática.

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