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1.
Br J Clin Pharmacol ; 2024 Apr 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38599659

ABSTRACT

We here present a case providing valuable insights for clinicians who deliver care to patients identifying as transgender or nonbinary. A 30-year-old trans woman presented to sexual health services requesting a routine sexual health screen and was subsequently diagnosed with HIV and syphilis. She started antiretrovirals for HIV (bictegravir/tenoforvir alafenamide/emtricitabine) 12 days later and was treated with benzathine penicillin G. The patient also had a positive tuberculosis (TB) ELIspot blood test result and further investigations proved the presence of active TB in the chest with mediastinal involvement. She commenced treatment for TB with quadruple therapy, including rifampicin. Due to the clinically significant interaction between rifampicin and bictegravir, the patient's antiretroviral treatment was switched to dolutegravir 50 mg twice daily in combination with tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and emtricitabine. As the patient had transitioned from male to female and was self-medicating with oestrogen-containing feminizing hormone therapy, her hormonal treatment was optimized and blood levels of oestradiol were closely monitored and titrated to manage the drug-drug interaction between rifampicin and oestrogen to ensure the latter would be maintained within the expected therapeutic range. Our case report demonstrates the importance of combining treatment of multiple conditions under 1 team ideally integrated with gender services to prevent multiple attendances and mismanagement of feminizing hormone therapies.

2.
Contemp Fam Ther ; : 1-14, 2022 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36212506

ABSTRACT

This article explores the experiences of some Black South African families affected by international migration. Historically, emigration from South Africa has occurred in waves, and has been associated with specific political moments. Such migration has often been perceived as a predominantly "White phenomenon", but recent trends reveal a more complex picture. Prior research on Black migration has focused primarily on internal labour migration, exilic migration and the "brain drain" phenomenon of medical professionals. So far, little research has been done on the impact of international outward migration on the Black family system. This article addresses this gap, drawing on a larger qualitative project exploring the impact of South African emigration on elderly family members staying behind. The findings highlight the significance of close relational ties in the Black South African family system. Familial separation through emigration brings feelings of loss and apprehension for the wellbeing of family members living abroad, including potential racism in destination countries. Migrants abroad highlighted the value of family and of maintaining a Black South African identity, despite separation from the country of origin and the extended family. Significantly, migration is often perceived as a temporary state, in contrast to White South African counterparts. Given increased international migration, the results shed light on the interplay between racial identity and emigration, and the impact of international migration by Black South Africans on family that they leave behind.

3.
J Cross Cult Gerontol ; 37(3): 275-294, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36136206

ABSTRACT

South Africa has experienced considerable international outward migration in the last half century, which has had a severe psychological impact on members of families affected by this phenomenon. Older parents who remain behind may experience feelings of loss and isolation. Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) are useful in maintaining relationships between family members separated by migration and increasingly allow migrant families to experience a virtual co-presence despite geographical separation. However, the process may be challenging, especially for older people with hearing difficulties. This article reports on a qualitative study exploring the perceptions of a group of older adults who have difficulty hearing and who live in a residential care home about using ICTs to communicate with family abroad. Interview data were analysed using thematic analysis. Most of the participants used either a fixed line telephone or a mobile phone. They reported challenges in communicating with family members abroad arising from their deafness, as well as difficulties using technological devices together with their hearing aids. These challenges resulted in feelings of helplessness and frustration. Although the data collection took place prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, these findings may be of particular relevance to situations such as those during the pandemic when many older adults became more reliant on technology to communicate with family members because of restrictions on direct contact. Accordingly, suggestions are made to address challenges in communication between older adults and loved ones who are geographically separated.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Emigrants and Immigrants , Humans , Aged , South Africa , Pandemics , Family/psychology , Communication
4.
Fam Process ; 59(4): 1737-1754, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31544236

ABSTRACT

In this article, we explore the impact of South African families' emigration on parents/grandparents who must renegotiate their lives in their loved ones' physical absence. We adopted a transnational perspective in a bigger qualitative project to consider both sides of the migratory spectrum. Here we focus on elderly family members who remain behind-a group largely neglected in prior research. Our findings illustrate the complex emotions and relational changes experienced by elderly people whose families emigrate. New technologies bridge distances, allowing new ways to connect and take care of each other, and of re-imagining transnational relationships and what constitutes family life, but these bridges cannot negate the loss experienced by those remaining. People have to make sense of the emigration and forge new relational bonds with remaining family members. Our findings stress grandparents' meaningful role in a family system and highlight some gendered and racial differences in families' experiences.


En este artículo analizamos el efecto de la emigración de familias sudafricanas en los padres/abuelos que deben renegociar sus vidas ante la ausencia física de sus seres queridos. Nosotros adoptamos una perspectiva transnacional en un proyecto cualitativo más grande para tener en cuenta ambos lados del espectro migratorio. Aquí nos centramos en los integrantes ancianos de la familia que se quedan, un grupo en gran parte abandonado en investigaciones previas. Nuestros hallazgos ilustran las emociones complejas y los cambios relacionales sufridos por los ancianos cuyas familias emigran. Las nuevas tecnologías tienden puentes y acortan distancias, ya que permiten nuevas maneras de conectarse, de cuidarse mutuamente y de reinventar las relaciones transnacionales y lo que constituye la vida familiar, pero estos puentes no pueden anular la pérdida sufrida por los que se quedan. Las personas tienen que dar sentido a la emigración y forjar nuevos lazos relacionales con los familiares que se quedan. Nuestros resultados acentúan el papel significativo de los abuelos en un sistema familiar y destacan algunas diferencias por género y raza en las experiencias de las familias.


Subject(s)
Emigrants and Immigrants/psychology , Emigration and Immigration , Family Relations/psychology , Family Separation , Family/psychology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Parents/psychology , Qualitative Research , South Africa
5.
Fam Process ; 51(3): 376-90, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22984975

ABSTRACT

Much has been written about the experiences and stresses of those who emigrate. By contrast, little attention has been paid to the experiences of those who stay behind-family members and friends who for various reasons do not to join their loved ones in the destination country. In this article, I describe the experiences of some South Africans whose families and friends have emigrated. This study forms part of a larger research project focusing on the impact of emigration on South African family life. Twenty-one participants were interviewed by means of a semistructured interview at least 6 months after one or more family member(s) and/or friend(s) left South Africa, to explore participants' experiences around their loved ones' emigration. A thematic analysis of the data reveals that those left behind experience various emotions, ranging from emotional ambivalence to anger and distress. Emigration is mostly experienced as a vast loss, almost akin to a "death," bringing about significant changes in social networks and relationships. The therapeutic significance of the findings for those working with emigrant families is also explored.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Bereavement , Emigration and Immigration , Family Relations , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Friends/psychology , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Middle Aged , Parents/psychology , Siblings/psychology , South Africa , Videoconferencing , Young Adult
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