Volume 17, Issue 5 , Pages 7-14, September 2006
Methamphetamine Use and HIV Symptom Self-Management
This study describes HIV-related symptoms in a methamphetamine-using sample of 20 men living in southern California. Data were obtained in 2004 and 2005 using a cross-sectional design. Participants were administered the Revised Sign and Symptom Check-List for Persons With HIV Disease and the Addiction Severity Index and were engaged in a semistructured interview. Participants reported using methamphetamine to treat HIV-related depression, fatigue, and neuropathic pain. HIV-related diarrhea seemed to diminish with methamphetamine use, although this was not a motivation for use. These results, although preliminary, suggest that further study of the interplay between methamphetamine use and HIV symptom management is warranted.
Key words: methamphetamine , HIV symptom self-management
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PII: S1055-3290(06)00198-1
doi:10.1016/j.jana.2006.07.003
© 2006 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 17, Issue 5 , Pages 7-14, September 2006
