Investigating the contributing factors to HIV/AIDS infection from the perspective of HIV-infected patients

Abstract Background People with HIV have always faced stigma and discrimination. Given the numerous papers that have addressed the psychological and social risk factors in spreading HIV, a pressing question is whether individuals’ mere careless and behavioural flaws can still account for the spread...

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Main Authors: Morteza Mehraeen, Mohammadreza Heydari, Kamran B. Lankarani, Hassan Joulaei, Marjan Faghih
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-01-01
Series:BMC Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-021-00513-w
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spelling doaj-ae444029f58e4d7293694ab24dc58d762021-01-31T12:11:23ZengBMCBMC Psychology2050-72832021-01-01911810.1186/s40359-021-00513-wInvestigating the contributing factors to HIV/AIDS infection from the perspective of HIV-infected patientsMorteza Mehraeen0Mohammadreza Heydari1Kamran B. Lankarani2Hassan Joulaei3Marjan Faghih4Shiraz HIV/AIDS Research Center (SHARC), Shiraz University of Medical SciencesShiraz HIV/AIDS Research Center (SHARC), Shiraz University of Medical SciencesHealth Policy Research Centre, Shiraz University of Medical SciencesShiraz HIV/AIDS Research Center (SHARC), Shiraz University of Medical SciencesDepartment of Biostatistics, School of Medicine, Arak University of Medical SciencesAbstract Background People with HIV have always faced stigma and discrimination. Given the numerous papers that have addressed the psychological and social risk factors in spreading HIV, a pressing question is whether individuals’ mere careless and behavioural flaws can still account for the spread of HIV. Barriers and opposing politic made a hard position for HIV and sex education in Iran. Methods The present study investigated the causes of contracting HIV/AIDS from the perspective of HIV-infected patients. To accomplish this, 150 patients referring to the voluntary counseling and testing Center, Shiraz were convenient selected based on the convenient sampling method and responded to a researcher-made questionnaire From June to August 2019. The data were analyzed through descriptive statistics (mean, SD, frequency tables) and inferential statistics (chi-square). Results Results revealed that the main cause of HIV infection amongst males was the injection of narcotics, and in the females it was sexual intercourse with an infected individual. Meanwhile, 57% of the females and 66% of the males blamed themselves for contracting and transmitting the disease. The patients stated that if they could return to pre-infection period, they would use one of the following ways to prevent the disease: (a) they would pay attention to hygienic/sanitary principles; (b) they would not get married; and (c) they would prevent drug addiction. Also only 44% of the individuals had successful siblings (those who were neither addicts nor HIV/AIDS-infected individuals), which was an observation that emphasizes on the epidemic of high-risk behaviors in the patients’ families. Conclusions According to participants' statements collected in our study, weakness in governmental public health education, along with family-related and individual factors, are important causes of HIV spreadhttps://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-021-00513-wHIV/AIDSCausalityAttitude
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Morteza Mehraeen
Mohammadreza Heydari
Kamran B. Lankarani
Hassan Joulaei
Marjan Faghih
spellingShingle Morteza Mehraeen
Mohammadreza Heydari
Kamran B. Lankarani
Hassan Joulaei
Marjan Faghih
Investigating the contributing factors to HIV/AIDS infection from the perspective of HIV-infected patients
BMC Psychology
HIV/AIDS
Causality
Attitude
author_facet Morteza Mehraeen
Mohammadreza Heydari
Kamran B. Lankarani
Hassan Joulaei
Marjan Faghih
author_sort Morteza Mehraeen
title Investigating the contributing factors to HIV/AIDS infection from the perspective of HIV-infected patients
title_short Investigating the contributing factors to HIV/AIDS infection from the perspective of HIV-infected patients
title_full Investigating the contributing factors to HIV/AIDS infection from the perspective of HIV-infected patients
title_fullStr Investigating the contributing factors to HIV/AIDS infection from the perspective of HIV-infected patients
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the contributing factors to HIV/AIDS infection from the perspective of HIV-infected patients
title_sort investigating the contributing factors to hiv/aids infection from the perspective of hiv-infected patients
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychology
issn 2050-7283
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Background People with HIV have always faced stigma and discrimination. Given the numerous papers that have addressed the psychological and social risk factors in spreading HIV, a pressing question is whether individuals’ mere careless and behavioural flaws can still account for the spread of HIV. Barriers and opposing politic made a hard position for HIV and sex education in Iran. Methods The present study investigated the causes of contracting HIV/AIDS from the perspective of HIV-infected patients. To accomplish this, 150 patients referring to the voluntary counseling and testing Center, Shiraz were convenient selected based on the convenient sampling method and responded to a researcher-made questionnaire From June to August 2019. The data were analyzed through descriptive statistics (mean, SD, frequency tables) and inferential statistics (chi-square). Results Results revealed that the main cause of HIV infection amongst males was the injection of narcotics, and in the females it was sexual intercourse with an infected individual. Meanwhile, 57% of the females and 66% of the males blamed themselves for contracting and transmitting the disease. The patients stated that if they could return to pre-infection period, they would use one of the following ways to prevent the disease: (a) they would pay attention to hygienic/sanitary principles; (b) they would not get married; and (c) they would prevent drug addiction. Also only 44% of the individuals had successful siblings (those who were neither addicts nor HIV/AIDS-infected individuals), which was an observation that emphasizes on the epidemic of high-risk behaviors in the patients’ families. Conclusions According to participants' statements collected in our study, weakness in governmental public health education, along with family-related and individual factors, are important causes of HIV spread
topic HIV/AIDS
Causality
Attitude
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-021-00513-w
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