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The aging of AIDS
New support method
offered for older
adults with HIV/AIDS
By Colleen Kiphart
The HIV support
group is filled with
young faces. They
talk about dating,
slowing work-out
routines, body
image, college
stress. But one
face, a bit more
worn than the
others, holds
thoughts he can’t
bring himself to
voice. How will he
tell his
grandchildren? Can
he add more
medications to his
staggering daily
regimen? How many
more friends can he
lose? What will
people think?
According to the
Centers for Disease
Control, in 2005, 24
percent of those
living with AIDS
were 50 or older,
compared to 17
percent in 2000. At
this rate, by 2015,
half of all new
cases of HIV in the
U.S. will be in
people over the age
of 50.
Given these data,
and the increasing
life spans of people
with HIV and AIDS,
Tim Heckman,
Ph.D., noticed a
research oversight;
among major studies,
research samples all
reflected people in
their 20s and 30s.
“We need to assess
the psychological
needs of older
adults, too,” said
Heckman, who is a
professor of
geriatric medicine
and gerontology at
the Ohio University
College of
Osteopathic
Medicine.
To do so, Heckman,
secured a four-year
National Institutes
of Health research
grant in 2006. In
its first two years,
the research
expanded nationwide
and yielded a
breakthrough study
on the benefits of
telephone support
groups for older
adults with HIV or
AIDS who suffer
depression.
About 35 percent of
older adults with
HIV live alone,
according to
Heckman. Many “don’t
feel connected to
the older community
because of their
HIV-positive
status,” he says.
Meanwhile, they
often don’t relate
to the younger
HIV-positive
community, or they
simply avoid seeking
support to avoid
social stigma.
Telephone support
groups provide
community with
anonymity.
Heckman recruited
ninety adults in New
York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania and
Arizona, all of whom
recently were
diagnosed with HIV
or AIDS in addition
to a serious
depressive disorder,
to participate in
telephone support
groups.
The participants
were divided into
two groups, with one
half receiving
immediate
intervention—group
telephone sessions
moderated by
graduate
students—and another
receiving delayed
intervention.
Participants in both
groups reported some
reduction in their
depression and
loneliness, but the
immediate
intervention group
saw the greater
benefit.
Charles A. Emlet,
Ph.D., MSW,
associate professor
of social work at
the University of
Washington Tacoma,
who also studies
AIDS in older
populations,
explains the
difficulty in
classifying the
psychological needs
of this group.
“Older adults living
with HIV/AIDS are
not a homogeneous
group,” Emlet says.
“The newly diagnosed
face challenges with
medication regimens,
understanding the
disease, disclosure
and potential social
stigma. Long-term
survivors also face
[additional] health
conditions and
psychological
impacts of the
disease such as
depression.”
The trick, Emlet
says, is in managing
both the virus and
the process of
aging—which requires
concurrent expertise
in infectious
disease, chronic
care and geriatrics.
He adds that the
intersection of
these conditions is
not well understood,
and [treatment]
resources are
limited and
concentrated in
metropolitan areas.
Heckman agrees that
more research is
needed, “There are
no long-term studies
on the effects of
[antiretroviral]
medications…We need
to better understand
how HIV medications
interact with other
therapies [in older
adults].”
Heckman cites data
showing that people
55 and older at the
time of their
diagnosis have the
lowest survival rate
of any group and are
usually diagnosed
later into their
illness—sometimes
not until the
disease has
progressed into
AIDS.
Heckman explains
that both patients
and doctors often
assume HIV symptoms
are just part of
getting older.
“There’s a
reluctance to think
of sexually
transmitted
infections in older
adults. Physicians
don’t think of it.”
Heckman recalls one
HIV-infected older
woman who went to 25
doctors before one
asked her if she had
been tested for HIV.
Many older people
are often
misinformed about
safe sex and HIV,
correlating condoms
exclusively with
birth control, for
example. This,
combined with
vaginal dryness and
tearing in older
women, erectile
dysfunction drugs,
drug use, and rising
rates of separation
and divorce, makes a
perfect storm for
the spread of HIV in
people over 50.
The disease is not
spreading evenly
across demographics.
While gay men still
make up the majority
of the HIV-positive
older population,
African-American
women over the age
of 50 are now among
the most at-risk
populations for
contracting HIV, and
diagnoses among
African-American and
Hispanic populations
are growing at 12
and five times the
rate of Caucasians,
respectively.
Heckman’s next study
will examine the
patterns and needs
among this diverse
population. His work
will include 360
people, nationwide,
including Hawaii,
urban areas, rural
areas—anywhere there
is a need. His
ultimate goal is to
“identify
intervention
programs that work,
and help
organizations and
communities
implement them.”
Over the last two
decades, HIV has
gone from a death
sentence to a
manageable, chronic
disease. Heckman was
among the first to
identify the
long-term
implications of this
shift for older
adults, and is
helping them find
their way to a
better quality of
life.
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