The interactive dimensions of encounters in HIV care: From trauma to relational traumatic growth

A person‐centred model of care, developed in the early days of the HIV epidemic when there were no effective treatments for HIV, led to relatively close relationships between carers and people living with HIV (PLWH). Our study examines the experiences of carers using a relational framework, exploring the traumas and challenges involved, coping practices instigated by carers and the emergence of ‘relational traumatic growth’ opportunities.

[1]  M. Rzeszutek,et al.  Posttraumatic growth and well-being among people living with HIV: A systematic review and meta-analysis in recognition of 40 years of HIV/AIDS , 2021, Quality of Life Research.

[2]  J. Catalan,et al.  HIV-related stigma in the UK then and now: to what extent are we on track to eliminate stigma? A qualitative investigation , 2021, BMC Public Health.

[3]  Jaime García-Iglesias Book Review: HIV in the UK: Voices from the Epidemic , 2021, Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine.

[4]  V. Braun,et al.  Conceptual and design thinking for thematic analysis , 2021 .

[5]  M. O. Kelifa,et al.  Healthcare Worker’s Mental Health and Their Associated Predictors During the Epidemic Peak of COVID-19 , 2021, Psychology research and behavior management.

[6]  V. Marotta,et al.  Relational Theories of Encounters and the Relational Subject , 2021 .

[7]  J. Oliffe,et al.  How men step back - and recover - from suicide attempts: A relational and gendered account. , 2020, Sociology of health & illness.

[8]  N. Greenberg,et al.  Mental health of staff working in intensive care during COVID-19. , 2021, Occupational medicine.

[9]  C. Chew‐Graham,et al.  A relational analysis of an invisible illness: A meta-ethnography of people with chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) and their support needs. , 2020, Social science & medicine.

[10]  S. Flottorp,et al.  The mental health impact of the covid-19 pandemic on healthcare workers, and interventions to help them: A rapid systematic review , 2020, Psychiatry Research.

[11]  J. Catalan,et al.  The Changing Narratives of Death, Dying, and HIV in the United Kingdom , 2020, Qualitative health research.

[12]  D. Siskind,et al.  Occurrence, prevention, and management of the psychological effects of emerging virus outbreaks on healthcare workers: rapid review and meta-analysis , 2020, BMJ.

[13]  C. Gerada Clare Gerada: Understanding burnout , 2020, BMJ.

[14]  D. Koniak-Griffin,et al.  Mindfulness-Based Intervention For Nurses In AIDS Care In China: A Pilot Study , 2019, Neuropsychiatric disease and treatment.

[15]  C. Jacob,et al.  Unsung Heroes: Gay Physicians’ Lived Journeys During the HIV/AIDS Pandemic , 2019, SAGE open.

[16]  J. Love The wounded storyteller , 2018 .

[17]  Rhys Price-Robertson,et al.  Relational recovery: beyond individualism in the recovery approach , 2017 .

[18]  A. Nishida Relating through differences: disability, affective relationality, and the U.S. public healthcare assemblage , 2017 .

[19]  M. Davhana-Maselesele,et al.  Knowledge and psychosocial wellbeing of nurses caring for people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWH) , 2016 .

[20]  Sasha Roseneil,et al.  Relational Persons and Relational Processes: Developing the Notion of Relationality for the Sociology of Personal Life , 2016 .

[21]  J. Herring Health as Vulnerability; Interdependence and Relationality , 2016, The New bioethics : a multidisciplinary journal of biotechnology and the body.

[22]  S. Ball Voices in the Band: A Doctor, Her Patients, and How the Outlook on AIDS Care Changed from Doomed to Hopeful , 2015 .

[23]  F. Dépelteau Relational sociology, pragmatism, transactions and social fields , 2015 .

[24]  A. V. van Dyk,et al.  Impact of caring for people living with HIV on the psychosocial well-being of palliative caregivers. , 2014, Curationis.

[25]  Sarah A. Chown How to Survive a Plague , 2014 .

[26]  J. Catalan,et al.  HIV infection associated post-traumatic stress disorder and post-traumatic growth – A systematic review , 2011, Psychology, health & medicine.

[27]  C. Johnman Research Methods in Health – Investigating Health and Health Services , 2010 .

[28]  Chaim Noy,et al.  Sampling Knowledge: The Hermeneutics of Snowball Sampling in Qualitative Research , 2008 .

[29]  B. Siviter Dying for care , 2008 .

[30]  V. Dickson-Swift,et al.  Doing sensitive research: what challenges do qualitative researchers face? , 2007 .

[31]  E. Schrimshaw,et al.  The Stress Moderating Role of Benefit Finding on Psychological Distress and Well-being among Women Living with HIV/AIDS , 2007, AIDS and Behavior.

[32]  A. M. T. Benevides-Pereira,et al.  A study on burnout syndrome in healthcare providers to people living with HIV , 2007, AIDS care.

[33]  R. Tedeschi,et al.  TARGET ARTICLE: "Posttraumatic Growth: Conceptual Foundations and Empirical Evidence" , 2004 .

[34]  G. Kalkut AIDS Doctors: Voices from the Epidemic , 2000, Nature Medicine.

[35]  David Miller Dying to Care? Work, stress and burnout in HIV/AIDS. , 1999 .

[36]  T. Greenhalgh,et al.  Narrative based medicine: why study narrative? , 1999, BMJ.

[37]  Shelley E. Taylor,et al.  Cognitive processing, discovery of meaning, CD4 decline, and AIDS-related mortality among bereaved HIV-seropositive men. , 1998, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[38]  J. Catalan,et al.  Psychological distress and burnout among buddies: demographic, situational and motivational factors. , 1998, AIDS care.

[39]  Ann Bowling,et al.  Research Methods in Health: Investigating Health and Health Services , 1997 .

[40]  D. Strouse Patient-centered medicine. , 1996, JAMA.

[41]  J. Catalan,et al.  The psychological impact on staff of caring for people with serious diseases: the case of HIV infection and oncology. , 1996, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[42]  Charles A. Johnson,et al.  Patient-Centered Medicine: Transforming the Clinical Method , 1995 .

[43]  P. Sheeran,et al.  Health care workers and HIV/AIDS: a critical review of the literature. , 1995, Social science & medicine.

[44]  V. Berridge The End of Innocence: Britain in the Time of AIDS , 1994 .

[45]  F. Dépelteau The Palgrave Handbook of Relational Sociology , 2018 .

[46]  Eyton,et al.  A CONTROLLED TRIAL OF TWO NUCLEOSIDE ANALOGUES PLUS INDINAVIR IN PERSONS WITH HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS INFECTION AND CD4 CELL COUNTS OF 200 PER CUBIC MILLIMETER OR LESS , 2000 .

[47]  E. Dun Surviving the Fall: The Personal Journey of an AIDS Doctor , 1999, The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.

[48]  Selwyn,et al.  Surviving the fall : the personal journey of an AIDS doctor , 1998 .

[49]  Lars-Christer Hydén,et al.  Illness and narrative , 1997 .

[50]  C. Freytag The Wounded Storyteller: Body Illness, and Ethics , 1996, Nature Medicine.