HIV Stigma, Sexual Identity Stigma and Online Coping Strategy of Gay, Bisexual and Queer People Living with HIV: A Moderated Mediation Study

Introduction Living with HIV/AIDS is more difficult for gay, bisexual, and queer (GBQ) people as they face stigma on both the disease and sexuality, which puts significant stress on coping with stressors, and online platforms have become an alternative coping channel. Method This study investigated...

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Main Authors: Ahmad, Muhammad Ashraff, Nor, Azmawaty Mohamad, Abd Hamid, Harris Shah
Format: Article
Published: Bentham Science Publishers 2024
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/46892/
https://doi.org/10.2174/011570162X300696240530095046
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spelling my.um.eprints.468922025-01-15T08:44:08Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/46892/ HIV Stigma, Sexual Identity Stigma and Online Coping Strategy of Gay, Bisexual and Queer People Living with HIV: A Moderated Mediation Study Ahmad, Muhammad Ashraff Nor, Azmawaty Mohamad Abd Hamid, Harris Shah BF Psychology R Medicine (General) RA Public aspects of medicine Introduction Living with HIV/AIDS is more difficult for gay, bisexual, and queer (GBQ) people as they face stigma on both the disease and sexuality, which puts significant stress on coping with stressors, and online platforms have become an alternative coping channel. Method This study investigated the use of online coping strategies in moderating the HIV stigma mediated by sexual identity stigma on mental health in Malaysia. 123 GBQ people living with HIV between the ages of 20 and 39 participated in the study, responding to the HIV Stigma - Short Form Scale, adapted China MSM Stigma Scale, Online Coping Inventory, and DASS-21. Result Results were analyzed using OLS, and logistic regression path modeling showed a statistically significant indirect effect of sexual identity stigma mediating HIV stigma on depressive (ab = 0.1362), anxiety (ab = 0.1259), and stress (ab = 0.1636) levels. Problem-focused online coping strategy was found to moderate the indirect association between HIV stigma and depression levels via sexual identity stigma at low (beta = 0.2110, SE = 0.0741, p<.05) and moderate levels (beta = 0.1168, SE = 0.0465, p<.05). The findings demonstrated the compounding link between HIV and sexual identity stigmas on mental health and how online coping strategies can be used as a helpful coping resource to manage depressive symptoms for this community and mental health practitioners. Conclusion These findings can be beneficial to generate a better understanding of how double stigmas play a role in mental health and the types of online coping strategies adopted to process the stressors for GBQ individuals living with HIV in Malaysia. Bentham Science Publishers 2024 Article PeerReviewed Ahmad, Muhammad Ashraff and Nor, Azmawaty Mohamad and Abd Hamid, Harris Shah (2024) HIV Stigma, Sexual Identity Stigma and Online Coping Strategy of Gay, Bisexual and Queer People Living with HIV: A Moderated Mediation Study. Current HIV Research, 22 (3). pp. 181-194. ISSN 1570-162X, DOI https://doi.org/10.2174/011570162X300696240530095046 <https://doi.org/10.2174/011570162X300696240530095046>. https://doi.org/10.2174/011570162X300696240530095046 10.2174/011570162X300696240530095046
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic BF Psychology
R Medicine (General)
RA Public aspects of medicine
spellingShingle BF Psychology
R Medicine (General)
RA Public aspects of medicine
Ahmad, Muhammad Ashraff
Nor, Azmawaty Mohamad
Abd Hamid, Harris Shah
HIV Stigma, Sexual Identity Stigma and Online Coping Strategy of Gay, Bisexual and Queer People Living with HIV: A Moderated Mediation Study
description Introduction Living with HIV/AIDS is more difficult for gay, bisexual, and queer (GBQ) people as they face stigma on both the disease and sexuality, which puts significant stress on coping with stressors, and online platforms have become an alternative coping channel. Method This study investigated the use of online coping strategies in moderating the HIV stigma mediated by sexual identity stigma on mental health in Malaysia. 123 GBQ people living with HIV between the ages of 20 and 39 participated in the study, responding to the HIV Stigma - Short Form Scale, adapted China MSM Stigma Scale, Online Coping Inventory, and DASS-21. Result Results were analyzed using OLS, and logistic regression path modeling showed a statistically significant indirect effect of sexual identity stigma mediating HIV stigma on depressive (ab = 0.1362), anxiety (ab = 0.1259), and stress (ab = 0.1636) levels. Problem-focused online coping strategy was found to moderate the indirect association between HIV stigma and depression levels via sexual identity stigma at low (beta = 0.2110, SE = 0.0741, p<.05) and moderate levels (beta = 0.1168, SE = 0.0465, p<.05). The findings demonstrated the compounding link between HIV and sexual identity stigmas on mental health and how online coping strategies can be used as a helpful coping resource to manage depressive symptoms for this community and mental health practitioners. Conclusion These findings can be beneficial to generate a better understanding of how double stigmas play a role in mental health and the types of online coping strategies adopted to process the stressors for GBQ individuals living with HIV in Malaysia.
format Article
author Ahmad, Muhammad Ashraff
Nor, Azmawaty Mohamad
Abd Hamid, Harris Shah
author_facet Ahmad, Muhammad Ashraff
Nor, Azmawaty Mohamad
Abd Hamid, Harris Shah
author_sort Ahmad, Muhammad Ashraff
title HIV Stigma, Sexual Identity Stigma and Online Coping Strategy of Gay, Bisexual and Queer People Living with HIV: A Moderated Mediation Study
title_short HIV Stigma, Sexual Identity Stigma and Online Coping Strategy of Gay, Bisexual and Queer People Living with HIV: A Moderated Mediation Study
title_full HIV Stigma, Sexual Identity Stigma and Online Coping Strategy of Gay, Bisexual and Queer People Living with HIV: A Moderated Mediation Study
title_fullStr HIV Stigma, Sexual Identity Stigma and Online Coping Strategy of Gay, Bisexual and Queer People Living with HIV: A Moderated Mediation Study
title_full_unstemmed HIV Stigma, Sexual Identity Stigma and Online Coping Strategy of Gay, Bisexual and Queer People Living with HIV: A Moderated Mediation Study
title_sort hiv stigma, sexual identity stigma and online coping strategy of gay, bisexual and queer people living with hiv: a moderated mediation study
publisher Bentham Science Publishers
publishDate 2024
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/46892/
https://doi.org/10.2174/011570162X300696240530095046
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