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AIDS Patient Care and STDs
Body Image in Patients with HIV/AIDS: Assessment of a New Psychometric Measure and Its Medical Correlates

To cite this article:
Shay M. Martinez, Carol A. Kemper, Catherine Diamond, Glenn Wagner. AIDS Patient Care and STDs. March 2005, 19(3): 150-156. doi:10.1089/apc.2005.19.150.

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Shay M. Martinez, B.A.
School of Medicine, University School of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York.
Carol A. Kemper, M.D.
Divisions of Infectious Diseases, Departments of Medicine, Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, San Jose, California.
Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
Catherine Diamond, M.D., M.P.H.
University of California Irvine, Orange, California.
Glenn Wagner, Ph.D.
RAND Corporation, Los Angeles, California.
The California Collaborative Treatment Group

HIV infection and its treatment can have significant effects on physical appearance and functioning, which can affect self-perceived body image. We assessed the psychometric properties of a newly developed Body Image Scale (BIS), a subjective measure of body image perception in persons with HIV infection, as well as the scale's relationship to disease progression, symptoms, and demographic factors. HIV-positive men (n = 129) and women (n = 21) attending two outpatient HIV clinics were administered the BIS survey along with a one-page questionnaire. A subset (n = 38) were administered the survey on two occasions to assess test-retest reliability. Nearly half of the sample (46%) had AIDS and 25% had a CD4 count below 200 cells/mm3 within the prior 3 months. The BIS had unidimensional factor structure, good internal consistency reliability (Chronbach α = 0.91), and good test–retest reliability (r = 0.71, p < 0.001) after controlling for the length of interval between assessments. Patients' current perception of their body image was worse then what they perceived it to be prior to HIV infection (p < 0.001), but better than their perception of how others view people with HIV (p < 0.001). The presence of symptomatic disease (p < 0.001) and a diagnosis of AIDS (p = 0.02) were associated with a less favorable body image, although laboratory markers of disease progression (CD4 count and plasma HIV viral load) were not. We conclude that the BIS has good construct validity and is a highly reproducible measure of self-perceptive of body image in HIV-infected patients. Further exploration of its relationship to psychological well being, medication adherence and other aspects of medical care is indicated.

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This paper was cited by:

Body Image in Men with HIV
Jeannie S. Huang, Daniel Lee, Karen Becerra, Rosanne Santos, Ed Barber, W. Christopher Mathews
AIDS Patient Care and STDs. Oct 2006, Vol. 20, No. 10: 668-677
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