Author:
Randolph Schenita D.,Johnson Ragan,McGee Kara,A. Adimora Adaora,Ramirez Catalina,Bailey Donald E.,Holt Lauren,Koch Amie,McMillian-Bohler Jacquelyn M.,Ritchwood Tiarney,Relf Michael V.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Women living with HIV (WLWH) report low engagement in health care, missed office visits, and less engagement in the clinical encounter. Strengthening the clinical encounter for WLWH may improve health outcomes and quality of life. The Adaptive Leadership Framework for Chronic Illness offers specific adaptive leadership strategies for providers to improve patient-provider interactions. The purpose of this study was to examine adaptive leadership behaviors that contribute to the development of effective patient-provider communication from the perspectives of WLWH.
Methods
The descriptive, cross-sectional and qualitative study conducted interviews with 22 WLWH to assess perceptions of the clinical encounter related to HIV-related stigma, engagement in care, medical distrust, and experiences with discrimination and quality of life. Members of the study team using a set of a priori codes analyzed data using NVivo 12.0.
Results
Participants described two primary themes and subthemes of each for adaptive leadership behaviors. The primary theme for adaptive leadership of providers was “my provider cares about me”; subthemes were communication, trust building takes time, and supportive providers are trusted. The primary theme for adaptive leadership of WLWH themselves was “I care about me; subthemes were self-advocacy and self-empowerment.
Conclusions
Providers can use adaptive leadership behaviors during clinical encounters to support WLWH, improve patient-provider communication, enhance trust, and improve patient outcomes.
Funder
Duke University Center for AIDS Research
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Center for AIDS Research
National Institute of Nursing Research
National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Obstetrics and Gynecology,Reproductive Medicine,General Medicine
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