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Is it safe? Talking to teens with HIV/AIDS about death and dying: a 3-month evaluation of Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning – anxiety, depression, quality of life

PURPOSE: To determine the safety of engaging HIV-positive (HIV+) adolescents in a Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning intervention. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted a 2-armed, randomized controlled clinical trial in 2 hospital-based outpatient clinics from 2006–2008 with HIV+ adolescents...

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Autores principales: Lyon, Maureen E, Garvie, Patricia A, Briggs, Linda, He, Jianping, Malow, Robert, D’Angelo, Lawrence J, McCarter, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3218704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22096382
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author Lyon, Maureen E
Garvie, Patricia A
Briggs, Linda
He, Jianping
Malow, Robert
D’Angelo, Lawrence J
McCarter, Robert
author_facet Lyon, Maureen E
Garvie, Patricia A
Briggs, Linda
He, Jianping
Malow, Robert
D’Angelo, Lawrence J
McCarter, Robert
author_sort Lyon, Maureen E
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: To determine the safety of engaging HIV-positive (HIV+) adolescents in a Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning intervention. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted a 2-armed, randomized controlled clinical trial in 2 hospital-based outpatient clinics from 2006–2008 with HIV+ adolescents and their surrogates (n = 76). Three 60–90 minutes sessions were conducted weekly. FACE intervention groups received: Lyon FCACP Survey(©), the Respecting Choices(®) interview, and completion of The Five Wishes(©). The Healthy Living Control (HLC) received: Developmental History, Healthy Tips, Future Planning (vocational, school or vocational rehabilitation). Three-month post-intervention outcomes were: completion of advance directive (Five Wishes(©)); psychological adjustment (Beck Depression, Anxiety Inventories); quality of life (PedsQL(™)); and HIV symptoms (General Health Self-Assessment). RESULTS: Adolescents had a mean age, 16 years; 40% male; 92% African-American; 68% with perinatally acquired HIV, 29% had AIDS diagnosis. FACE participants completed advance directives more than controls, using time matched comparison (P < 0.001). Neither anxiety, nor depression, increased at clinically or statistically significant levels post-intervention. FACE adolescents maintained quality of life. FACE families perceived their adolescents as worsening in their school (P = 0.018) and emotional (P = 0.029) quality of life at 3 months, compared with controls. CONCLUSIONS: Participating in advance care planning did not unduly distress HIV+ adolescents.
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spelling pubmed-32187042011-11-17 Is it safe? Talking to teens with HIV/AIDS about death and dying: a 3-month evaluation of Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning – anxiety, depression, quality of life Lyon, Maureen E Garvie, Patricia A Briggs, Linda He, Jianping Malow, Robert D’Angelo, Lawrence J McCarter, Robert HIV AIDS (Auckl) Original Research PURPOSE: To determine the safety of engaging HIV-positive (HIV+) adolescents in a Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning intervention. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted a 2-armed, randomized controlled clinical trial in 2 hospital-based outpatient clinics from 2006–2008 with HIV+ adolescents and their surrogates (n = 76). Three 60–90 minutes sessions were conducted weekly. FACE intervention groups received: Lyon FCACP Survey(©), the Respecting Choices(®) interview, and completion of The Five Wishes(©). The Healthy Living Control (HLC) received: Developmental History, Healthy Tips, Future Planning (vocational, school or vocational rehabilitation). Three-month post-intervention outcomes were: completion of advance directive (Five Wishes(©)); psychological adjustment (Beck Depression, Anxiety Inventories); quality of life (PedsQL(™)); and HIV symptoms (General Health Self-Assessment). RESULTS: Adolescents had a mean age, 16 years; 40% male; 92% African-American; 68% with perinatally acquired HIV, 29% had AIDS diagnosis. FACE participants completed advance directives more than controls, using time matched comparison (P < 0.001). Neither anxiety, nor depression, increased at clinically or statistically significant levels post-intervention. FACE adolescents maintained quality of life. FACE families perceived their adolescents as worsening in their school (P = 0.018) and emotional (P = 0.029) quality of life at 3 months, compared with controls. CONCLUSIONS: Participating in advance care planning did not unduly distress HIV+ adolescents. Dove Medical Press 2010-02-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3218704/ /pubmed/22096382 Text en © 2010 Lyon et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Lyon, Maureen E
Garvie, Patricia A
Briggs, Linda
He, Jianping
Malow, Robert
D’Angelo, Lawrence J
McCarter, Robert
Is it safe? Talking to teens with HIV/AIDS about death and dying: a 3-month evaluation of Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning – anxiety, depression, quality of life
title Is it safe? Talking to teens with HIV/AIDS about death and dying: a 3-month evaluation of Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning – anxiety, depression, quality of life
title_full Is it safe? Talking to teens with HIV/AIDS about death and dying: a 3-month evaluation of Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning – anxiety, depression, quality of life
title_fullStr Is it safe? Talking to teens with HIV/AIDS about death and dying: a 3-month evaluation of Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning – anxiety, depression, quality of life
title_full_unstemmed Is it safe? Talking to teens with HIV/AIDS about death and dying: a 3-month evaluation of Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning – anxiety, depression, quality of life
title_short Is it safe? Talking to teens with HIV/AIDS about death and dying: a 3-month evaluation of Family Centered Advance Care (FACE) planning – anxiety, depression, quality of life
title_sort is it safe? talking to teens with hiv/aids about death and dying: a 3-month evaluation of family centered advance care (face) planning – anxiety, depression, quality of life
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3218704/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22096382
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