Abstract

ABSTRACTHIV/AIDS not only affects the patients, but also their entire family. This study aimed to assess the impacts of the patients’ and their spouses’ anxiety and depression on their quality of life (QoL) at the dyadic level. A total of 120 serodiscordant husband-wife dyads from the voluntary counselling and testing center in Shiraz, Iran, were involved in this study from February to June 2015. The WHOQOL-BREEF, CESD-10, and Beck Anxiety Inventory instruments were used, respectively, to assess the QoL, depression, and anxiety scores of the participants. The actor-partner interdependence model (APIM) was used to estimate the effects of depression and anxiety of both the people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) and their spouses on their own QoL (actor effect) as well as their partners’ (partner effect). The APIM analysis revealed that both PLWHAs’ and their spouses’ depression and anxiety showed actor effects on their own QoL. Furthermore, spouses’ depression showed a significant partner effect on PLWHAs’ QoL and PLWHAs’ anxiety had significant partner effects on spouses’ QoL. Accordingly, this data can be used to develop targeted interventions aimed at guidance and assistance of PLWHAs and their spouses to find coping strategies that improve their own QoL as well as their partners’.

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