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Patient
Optimism and the Mechanisms by Which It Predicts Slower Disease
Progression in HIV
The issue of whether optimism
may prospectively protect against disease progression is one that
has generated much interest, with mixed results in the literature.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether dispositional
optimism predicts slower disease
progression in HIV.
Two indicators of disease progression, CD4
counts and viral
load, were assessed over 2 years in a diverse group
(men, women, White, African American, Hispanic) of 177 people with
HIV in the midrange of disease at entry to the study.
Results
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Optimism
predicted slower disease progression (less decrease in CD4 and less
increase in viral load) controlling for baseline CD4 and viral load,
antiretroviral treatment, gender, race, education, and drug use.
·
Those
low on optimism (25th percentile) lost CD4 cells at a rate 1.55
times faster than those high on optimism (75th percentile).
·
Optimists
had higher proactive behavior, less avoidant coping, and less depression: These variables mediated
the linear optimism-disease progression relationship.
·
Thus, optimists may reap health benefits partly through
behavioral (proactive behavior), cognitive (avoidant coping), and
affective (depression) pathways.
Department of Psychology, University of Miami.
05/25/05
Reference
G Ironson and others. Dispositional Optimism and
the Mechanisms by Which It Predicts Slower Disease Progression in
HIV: Proactive Behavior, Avoidant Coping, and Depression.
International Journal of Behavioral Medicine 12(2):86-97.
2005.
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