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Women living with HIV in Nigeria: Predictive influence of hardiness on perceived stress


Aliyu Adamu
Gugu Mchunu
Joanne Rachel Naidoo

Abstract

Background: Women living with HIV experience severe HIV-related stress in sub-Saharan Africa. But evidence shows that individuals with high levels of the psychological hardiness characteristic who accept stressful situations as meaningful experience may withstand psychological stress. However, the literature on associations between hardiness and HIV-related stress among women living with HIV is scarce. The objective of this study was to investigate the relationship between hardiness and HIV-related stress among women living with HIV in Niger State, Nigeria.
Methods: This study used a cross-sectional design. A systematic sampling technique was used to recruit 748 participants from three selected hospitals in Niger State. The perceived stress scale and the health-related hardiness scale were used for data collection. A total of 676 questionnaires were returned in usable form and were analysed using hierarchical regression analysis.
Results: Pearson’s correlation analysis showed that there is a statistically significant association between perceived stress and subscales of hardiness (p < 0.001). Hierarchical regression analysis results showed that hardiness significantly predicted perceived stress among the study sample with R2 = 0.286, F(3, 669) = 90, p < 0.001.
Conclusion: The finding of this study that higher hardiness is associated with lower perceived stress suggests the potential helpfulness to women living with HIV of this personality for coping. The finding also suggests that nurses and other health care workers may facilitate the development and/or improvement of hardiness characteristics through cognitive behavioural interventions among women living with HIV to ameliorate HIV-related stress.


Keywords: adversity, coping, resilience, sub-Saharan Africa, traits


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1608-5906
print ISSN: 1727-9445