The dynamic network characteristics of physical, psychological, and cognitive symptoms of people with HIV based on cross-lagged network analysis in China
Meilian Xie, Xiaoyu Liu, Zhiyun Zhang, Yanping Yu, Li Zhang, Jieli Zhang, Dongxia Wu

TL;DR
This study uses a dynamic network to analyze how physical, psychological, and cognitive symptoms of people with HIV in China are connected over time.
Contribution
The paper introduces a cross-lagged network analysis to identify bridging symptoms and causal relationships in HIV symptom progression.
Findings
Becoming confusing is strongly linked to difficulty in reasoning (OR = 1.20).
Psychological symptoms like feeling hopeless are connected to physical symptoms like rash (OR = 1.11).
Cognitive symptoms are central in linking psychological and physical symptom domains.
Abstract
This study aims to construct a dynamic network by collecting longitudinal data, which will assist medical professionals in identifying bridging symptoms associated with disease progression and causal mechanisms. A longitudinal observational study was conducted from March to June 2024, recruiting an initial cohort of people with HIV (PWH) from three designated AIDS medical institutions in Beijing, China. Symptom data were collected at two time points, three months apart, using the Chinese version of the Self-Report Symptom Scale (SRSS) alongside a demographic questionnaire. The data were analyzed using cross-lagged panel network analysis to explore symptom dynamics over time. A total of 791 PWH were recruited and 706 participants (89.25%) continued to the 3-month follow-up, with a mean age of 38.37 ± 10.03 years. There were no significant differences in demographic variables between…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health Research Topics · Bipolar Disorder and Treatment · HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions
