# Validation of Standardized Nursing Languages for People Living with HIV Over 50

**Authors:** Juh Shin, Sue Moorhead, Elizabeth Swanson, Mary Clarke, Cheryl Wagner, Karen Dunn Lopez, Nidhi Naidu, Hritik Majgaonkar

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.4043 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study validates nursing care elements for older adults with HIV to improve their tailored care and quality of life.

## Contribution

The study provides a validated framework of nursing diagnoses, interventions, and outcomes specific to older adults living with HIV.

## Key findings

- Experts identified critical nursing diagnoses like risk for loneliness and impaired memory.
- Key interventions included Medication Management and Emotional Support for this population.
- Important outcomes such as Social Support and Immunization Behavior were validated for care planning.

## Abstract

Despite improvements in HIV treatment, nursing care for older adults living with HIV remains insufficiently tailored to their unique needs. This study aimed to identify and validate nursing diagnoses, interventions, and outcomes relevant to this population. A content validation survey was conducted with 27 HIV/AIDS nursing experts who evaluated 45 nursing diagnoses, 79 outcomes, and 82 interventions on their relevance using a five-point scale. Relevance ratios classified each item as critical, supplemental, or unnecessary. Experts identified critical nursing diagnoses such as risk for loneliness, impaired memory, and risk for infection. Key interventions included Medication Management, education on prescribed medications, and Emotional Support. Important nursing outcomes identified were Social Support, Infection Severity, and Immunization Behavior. These validated elements provide an evidence-based framework for developing holistic, individualized care plans addressing both HIV-specific and aging-related health concerns. Incorporating these findings into clinical nursing practice can improve assessment, planning, and care delivery for older adults living with HIV. Nurses are encouraged to use these validated care components to deliver comprehensive, person-centered care that attends to physical, cognitive, and psychosocial needs, thereby enhancing health outcomes and quality of life for this growing population.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762074