This study examined the mechanism by which stressors, dissatisfaction with family, perceived control, social support, and coping were related to psychological distress in a sample of HIV-positive African American mothers. Additional analyses explored whether women who had a history of a drug abuse or dependence diagnosis differed either on levels of the study variables or the model pathways. The results indicated that HIV-positive African American mothers who had higher levels of stressors perceived their stressors as a whole to be less controllable. Coping resources, available social support and perceived control, were positively associated with active coping and negatively associated with psychological distress. Avoidant coping was the most important predictor of psychological distress. Furthermore, the effect of avoidant coping on psychological distress was stronger for mothers with a history of drug diagnosis. The implications of these findings for targeting interventions are discussed.
KeywordsDrug abuse history; HIV/AIDS; African American women; stress process model The HIV/AIDS epidemic represents a growing and persistent health threat to women, especially women of color. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC&P, 2005) reported that AIDS was the 6th leading cause of death among all women aged 25 to 34 years and the 4th leading cause of death among all women aged 35 to 44 years. Additionally, the rate of AIDS diagnoses for African American women was approximately 25 times the rate for white women and 4 times the rate for Hispanic women. AIDS is now the leading cause of death for African American women aged 25 to 34 years and is among the four leading causes of death for African American women aged 20 to 24 and 35 to 44 years.