The care paradigm for people with HIV has shifted from managing progressive illness with a poor prognosis to managing a chronic condition. Despite this improvement, people living with HIV continue to experience considerable stresses, so promoting their holistic wellbeing is a key aspect of long-term care.
This book provides an accessible introduction for healthcare professionals who work with people living with HIV. It is designed to help readers understand how care in practice can be more person-centred and psychologically focused, whilst promoting compassion, health and wellbeing. Topics covered include self-awareness, attachment theories and communication as well as key aspects of providing care for people living with HIV, such as stigma in young adults, neurocognitive issues, the sexualized use of drugs, managing neuropathic pain, and the needs of older adults living with HIV.
Invaluable reading for health professionals working within multidisciplinary teams that provide care for people living with HIV, this book is also a core text for those studying in the area.
Edited by:
Michelle Croston (Manchester Metropolitan University UK),
Sarah Rutter
Imprint: Routledge
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 246mm,
Width: 174mm,
Weight: 440g
ISBN: 9780415792783
ISBN 10: 0415792789
Pages: 228
Publication Date: 30 July 2020
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Professional and scholarly
,
Primary
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
1.The good, the bad and the ugly: How do people living with HIV experience care in the health system? 2.Self -Awareness in HIV care 3.Seeing the whole person : A biopsychosocial perspective in HIV care 4.HIV Diagnosis: The impact on mental health and wellbeing 5.Stormy waters: difficult conversations in HIV care 6.Traumatic beginnings, complicated lives: Attachment styles, relationships and HIV care 7.Chemsex among men who have sex with men: a social psychological approach 8.The seemingly intractable problem of HIV-related stigma: developing a framework to guide stigma interventions with young people living with HIV 9.Multidisciplinary management of neuropathic pain in HIV care 10.The psychological impact of ageing with HIV 11.Neurocognitive issues for adults in HIV care
Michelle Croston is Senior Lecturer at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK, and has over 20 years of experience working within HIV care as a Specialist Nurse. She was previously the Chair of the UK’s National HIV Nurses Association (NHIVNA). Sarah Rutter is a Clinical Psychologist whose experience falls primarily within the field of physical health. She is Psychology Lead in the HIV Service at North Manchester General Hospital and the current chair of the British Psychological Society’s Faculty of HIV and Sexual Health.