HIV‐related stigma, couple relationship quality, and mental health in sero‐discordant pregnant couples in Kenya
Asuman Buyukcan‐Tetik, Turan Deniz Ergun, Bulent Turan, Reshmi Mukerji, Kevin Owuor, Abigail Hatcher, Elizabeth A. Bukusi, Zachary Kwena, Anna Helova, Evelyne Owengah, Lynae Darbes, Janet M. Turan

TL;DR
This study explores how HIV-related stigma and relationship quality affect mental health in Kenyan sero-discordant pregnant couples.
Contribution
The study reveals how stigma and relationship quality jointly impact mental health in both partners of sero-discordant couples.
Findings
HIV-related stigma harms the mental health of both partners in sero-discordant couples.
High relationship quality is linked to better mental health, but it does not buffer the negative effects of stigma.
Partners' perceptions of relationship quality can have opposing effects on each other's mental health.
Abstract
HIV‐related stigma negatively impacts the health of people who are living with HIV. Stigma may also affect sero‐discordant couples where one partner is living with HIV, but the other is not. However, we know little about how HIV‐related stigma and couple relationship quality jointly affect depression and anxiety in both the individual and their partner. We analyzed dyadic data from 491 sero‐discordant pregnant couples in southwestern Kenya collected during 2019–2022 using Actor‐Partner Interdependence Model (APIM) methods. Controlling for relationship quality, HIV‐related stigma perceived by both women and men was detrimental to their own mental health as well as to their partner's mental health. High relationship quality was associated with better mental health of couple members, independent of stigma, but reporting high relationship quality did not significantly buffer the negative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness
