College of Behavioral & Social Sciences

Permanent URI for this communityhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/8

The collections in this community comprise faculty research works, as well as graduate theses and dissertations..

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    BLACK SURVIVAL POLITICS: ORGANIZED MOBILIZATION STRATEGIES IN AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITIES TO END THE HIV/AIDS EPIDEMIC
    (2016) Beadle Holder, Michelle; Collins, Patricia H; Sociology; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    The purpose of this study is to examine organizational patterns of African American activism in response the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Given their political, economic, and social disenfranchisement, African Americans have historically developed protest and survival strategies to respond to the devaluation of their lives, health, and well-being. While Black protest strategies are typically regarded as oppositional and transformative, Black survival strategies have generally been conceptualized as accepting inequality. In the case of HIV/AIDS, African American religious and non-religious organizations were less likely to deploy protest strategies to ensure the survival and well-being of groups most at risk for HIV/AIDS—such as African American gay men and substance abusers. This study employs a multiple qualitative case study analysis of four African American organizations that were among the early mobilizers to respond to HIV/AIDS in Washington D.C. These organizations include two secular or community-based organizations and two Black churches or faith-based organizations. Given the association of HIV/AIDS with sexual sin and social deviance, I postulated that Black community-based organizations would be more responsive to the HIV/AIDS-related needs and interests of African Americans than their religious counterparts. More specifically, I expected that Black churches would be more conservative (i.e. maintain paternalistic heteronormative sexual standards) than the community-based organizations. Yet findings indicate that the Black churches in this study were more similar than different than the community-based organizations in their strategic responses to HIV/AIDS. Both the community-based organizations and Black churches drew upon three main strategies in ways that politicalize the struggle for Black survival—or what I regard as Black survival politics. First, Black survival strategies for HIV/AIDS include coalition building at the intersection of multiple systems of inequality, as well as on the levels of identity and community. Second, Black survival politics include altering aspects of religious norms and practices related to sex and sexuality. Third, Black survival politics relies on the resources of the government to provide HIV/AIDS related programs and initiatives that are, in large part, based on the gains made from collective action.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    The Relation between Substance Use and Medication Adherence among HIV Positive Substance Users in Residential Treatment
    (2015) Hoffman, Elana Michelle; MacPherson, Laura; Psychology; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Poor medication adherence is problematic among HIV positive, low-income African-American substance users. Substance use has been shown to be associated with poor medication adherence, though we do not know the mechanism that underlies this relationship. Lack of positive environmental rewards and the propensity to discount delayed rewards may be possible mechanisms to explain this relationship. Using baseline data from a randomized controlled trial, we examined the relationships between substance use and medication adherence, testing both environmental rewards and delay discounting as independent mediators. There was a main effect of substance use on adherence, such that high frequency of substance use predicted poor adherence. There was also a main effect of environmental rewards on adherence, such that a lack of environmental reinforcement predicted poor adherence. This study shed light on the processes that contribute to low adherence, namely substance use and lack of environmental contingencies, and suggests important targets for intervention.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    Mediators of the Relationship between Depression and Medication Adherence among HIV Positive Substance Users
    (2012) Magidson, Jessica F; Lejuez, Carl W; Psychology; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Medication adherence is of utmost importance in predicting health outcomes across numerous chronic conditions, particularly HIV/AIDS. Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) to treat HIV/AIDS requires high levels of adherence to maintain viral suppression, which is crucial for optimal HIV treatment and prevention. One of the most significant patient-level barriers to medication adherence is depressive symptoms. Even at subclinical levels, depressive symptoms predict nonadherence above and beyond other relevant psychosocial factors. Despite the focus on depressive symptoms as a reliable and powerful predictor of nonadherence, few studies have sought to test potential mechanisms underlying this relationship, which is an important step to advance our understanding of how depression affects adherence to inform intervention efforts. The current study utilized early behavioral theories of depression (Lewinsohn, 1974; Ferster, 1973) to select potential mediators that may be relevant to both depression and adherence. Specifically, we tested the key components of these models, (1) goal-directed activation, (2) positive reinforcement, and (3) punishment in one's environment as potential mediators of the relationship between depressive symptoms and medication adherence among HIV positive individuals in substance abuse treatment (n = 73). We examined adherence to HAART as well as adherence to other daily medications using a combination of self-report assessments (% of doses missed over past four days, frequency of doses missed across common reasons for nonadherence) and viral load. Greater levels of punishment mediated a positive relationship between clinician-rated depressive symptoms and greater frequency of missed doses across common reasons for nonadherence. Activation and positive reinforcement were unrelated to adherence or viral load in this sample. Findings suggest the importance of punishment in explaining the relationship between depression and medication nonadherence. Individuals with elevated depressive symptoms may perceive greater negative consequences related to medications (e.g., side effects, stigma) and may be less likely to overcome barriers necessary for optimal adherence. If findings continue to replicate, this may suggest a need to target punishment in HIV prevention and treatment, for instance in the context of integrated cognitive behavior therapy interventions that target depression and adherence among substance users.