Abstract

To explore relationships between mothers' uncertainty about infant HIV serostatus with stress, distress, depressive symptoms, and social support during infant HIV testing. This prospective longitudinal study of 20 HIV-infected mothers involved a prenatal visit and five postpartum visits clustered around infant HIV viral testing. Maternal uncertainty about infant HIV serostatus significantly decreased over time (p < 0.001). Before testing, uncertainty was inversely related to social support (r = -0.67), and positively related to perceived stress (r = 0.54), interpersonal social conflict (r = 0.57), symptom distress (r = 0.62), and depressive symptoms (r = 0.50); these relationships persisted throughout the infant testing period. Mothers with depressive symptoms during pregnancy demonstrated significantly more uncertainty within a few weeks after birth than mothers without depressive symptoms (p < 0.05). Several weeks after learning their infants were HIV negative, mothers' uncertainty was only associated with social conflict (r = 0.49). Maternal uncertainty about infant HIV status declined significantly over time. There were no changes in perceptions of stress, distress or social support. Mothers with depressive symptoms experienced greater uncertainty about infants' HIV status. Strategies to enhance support and treat depressive symptoms may reduce the uncertainty, stress, and distress HIV-infected mothers experience during viral testing of their infants.

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