Scientific Reports (Oct 2023)

Investigating coping and stigma in people living with HIV through narrative medicine in the Italian multicentre non-interventional study DIAMANTE

  • A. Antinori,
  • A. Vergori,
  • D. Ripamonti,
  • D. Valenti,
  • V. Esposito,
  • M. A. Carleo,
  • S. Rusconi,
  • A. Cascio,
  • E. Manzillo,
  • M. Andreoni,
  • G. Orofino,
  • A. Cappuccio,
  • L. Reale,
  • M. G. Marini,
  • D. Mancusi,
  • R. Termini,
  • A. Uglietti,
  • M. Portaro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-44768-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Antiretroviral therapy (ART) significantly reduced Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) morbidity and mortality; nevertheless, stigma still characterises the living with this condition. This study explored patients’ coping experience by integrating narrative medicine (NM) in a non-interventional clinical trial. From June 2018 to September 2020 the study involved 18 centres across Italy; enrolled patients were both D/C/F/TAF naïve and previously ART-treated. Narratives were collected at enrolment (V1) and last visit (V4) and then independently analysed by three NM specialist researchers through content analysis. One-hundred and fourteen patients completed both V1 and V4 narratives. Supportive relationships with clinicians and undetectable viral load facilitated coping. Conversely, lack of disclosure of HIV-positive status, HIV metaphors, and unwillingness to narrate the life before the diagnosis indicated internalised stigma. This is the first non-interventional study to include narratives as patient reported outcomes (PROs). Improving HIV awareness and reducing the sense of guilt experienced by patients helps to overcome stigma and foster coping.