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Table 1 Characteristics of studies and participants

From: A qualitative metasynthesis of stigma in women living with HIV in the United States

Author/Year

Aim

Location

Methodology

N

Mean age

Buchberg et al. (2015)

Identify factors associated with postpartum retention in care among WLWH

Houston, Texas

Mixed methods

22

28.2

Buseh et al. (2006)

Explore African American women’s narratives of LWH to understand how they experienced and responded to HIV stigma

Urban and rural Wisconsin

Narrative

29

40

Caiola et al. (2017)

Explore the social determinants of health for African American LWH by examining how mothers describe their social location at the intersection of gender, race, and class inequality; HIV-related stigma; and motherhood

Semi-urban area of North Carolina

Qualitative descriptive

18

41.5

Carr, R. & Gramling, L. (2004)

Determine the beliefs and behaviors European American women use to maintain, improve, or enhance their health after being diagnosed with HIV/AIDS

Location not disclosed

Ethnography

9

37

Cuca, Y. & Rose, C. (2016)

Examine reproductive decision-making among WLWH

San Francisco, California

Grounded theory

20

46

Dale et al. (2018)

Sought the insights of BWLWH on how they cope with multiple adversities and their thoughts on a proposed adapted intervention

Boston, Massachusetts

Not specified

30

46.5

Dale, S. & Safren, S. (2018)1

Shed light on the ways social support may be a resilience resource for BWLWH

--

--

--

--

Davis et al. (2021)

Examine personal HIV-stigma experiences in Latina/Hispanic and African American women using PhotoVoice

Los Angeles, California

Mixed methods

15

49.6

Davtyan et al. (2016)

(1) Identify the factors associated with WLHIV staying in or leaving IPV relationships (or ending); (2) Understand the specific roles that HIV stigma and attachment play in WLWH’s IPV relationships; (3) Learn how medical and social service providers can support WLWH to safely end IPV

San Francisco, California

Phenomenology

10

37.5

Fair, C. & Brackett, B. (2008)

Understand how HIV-positive mothers and their children experience and interpret stigma and discrimination

North Carolina

Mixed methods

8

41.5

Fernandez et al. (2022)

Understand the role of housing instability, particularly sociocultural- and stigma-related factors, and competing demands that impact daily ART adherence and care engagement

South Florida

Phenomenology

16

48.5

Fletcher et al. (2016)

Explore perspectives about reproduction and motherhood and how they were impacted by healthcare provider advice

South Carolina

Phenomenology

42

37.7

Fletcher et al. (2020)

(1) Examine resilience strategies used to cope with stressors and challenges; (2) Assess the associations of resilience with HIV health outcomes in the context of differing levels of internalized HIV-related stigma and depressive symptoms

Birmingham, AL; Jackson, MS; Atlanta, GA; San Francisco, CA

Mixed methods

76

48

Grodensky et al. (2015)

(1) Investigate the important psychosocial factors impacting older women’s living and coping with HIV infection, particularly in social and spiritual relationships; (2) Explore relationships between those factors

Southeastern U.S.

Not specified

15

57

Hampton, C. & Gillum, T. (2020)

Understand the experiences of African American WLWH/AIDS in relation to HIV-related stigma and the ways in which these experiences have affected their self-perceptions

Northeast region of the U.S.

Phenomenology

16

46

James-Borga, J. & Frederickson, (2018)

To gain a deeper understanding of the experience of LWH for older African American women

Location not disclosed

Phenomenology

10

58.9

Kempf et al. (2010)

Explore the barriers and facilitators to clinic visit adherence among HIV-positive women residing in the southeastern United States

Rural Southeast Alabama

Qualitative descriptive

39

46.1

Kim et al. (2021)

Disambiguate the additive effects of mother-child relationship quality, maternal anxiety, and maternal HIV stigma on child psychosocial adjustment with WLWH and their serostatus negative children

Georgia and California

Mixed methods

14

39

Koch et al. (2022)

Explore coping and resilience among Black women living with HIV in the Southern United States

North Carolina

Mixed methods

20

51.7

Lekas et al. (2006)

(1) To analyze the experiences of felt and enacted stigma among WLWH/AIDS and examine the extent to which they have changed over time; (2) Analyze the role of race and/or ethnicity in these women’s experiences of stigmatization

New York, NY

The qualitative portion of a community engaged study

158

36.5

Marg et al. (2020)

Understand the challenges, coping strategies, and experiences of older WLWH

Coachella Valley, California

The qualitative portion of a community engaged study

9

57

McDoom et al. (2015)

Understand how older BWLWH perceived their experiences with stigma and social support and how it either facilitated or inhibited engagement in HIV care

Boston, Massachusetts

Grounded theory

20

56.6

McMillian-Bohler et al. (2023)1

Explore stigma and disclosure among women living and aging with HIV in North Carolina

North Carolina

Mixed methods

2

52.2

Ojukwu et al. (2022)

Explore the facilitators and barriers of HIV treatment engagement among Black older women living in the Southeastern United States

South Florida

Qualitative descriptive

17

57.4

Peltzer et al. (2016)

To understand the everyday experiences of young African American HIV-positive women

Midwestern metropolitan area

Phenomenology

11

25

Peltzer et al. (2017)

Examine African American WLWH’s experiences of psychological distress and their use of coping strategies

Kansas, Missouri

Qualitative descriptive

22

48

Phillips et al. (2011)

Sought the meaning of WLH/AIDS in isolated, impoverished circumstances in the rural Southeast United States

South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama

Phenomenology

39

39.75

Qiao et al. (2021)

Explore perceptions of functional wellness for WLH from the perspectives of WLH and HCPs

South Carolina

Grounded theory

20

48.9

Relf et al. (2015)

(1) Test the feasibility and acceptability of a stigma intervention for WLWH in Southeastern U.S.; (2) Compare outcomes across time in women receiving the intervention; (3) Understand the effects of HIV-related stigma on psychosocial well-being in WLWH in the Deep South

North Carolina

Qualitative descriptive

51

46.3

Rice et al. (2018)

Answer how WLWH perceive stigma associated with their co-existing social identities

Atlanta, GA, Birmingham, AL, Brooklyn, NY, Chapel Hill, NC, Chicago, IL, and Jackson, MS

Mixed methods

76

48

Rice et al. (2019)1

Examine effects of stigma in healthcare settings on engagement in HIV care, and potential psychosocial

mechanisms for these effects (i.e., adherence self-efficacy, depressive symptoms, and coping by substance use)

--

--

--

--

Rice et al. (2020)

Explore stigma and discrimination (due to HIV, race/ethnicity, and other intersectional identities), concepts interrelated with quality of health care for Black and Latina WLWH

Atlanta, GA, Birmingham, AL, Brooklyn, NY, Chapel Hill, NC, Chicago, IL, and Jackson, MS

Mixed methods

92

Provided range

Robillard et al. (2017)

Document advice from HIV-positive African-American women to young African-American women, as described in their own cultural narratives

Columbia, South Carolina

Grounded theory

25

44.5

Sanders (2008)

Explore the meaning of pregnancy after diagnosis with HIV

Metropolitan New York

Phenomenology

9

36.5

Sangaramoorthy et al. (2017)

Explore HIV stigma, retention in care, and ART adherence in older BWLWH

Prince George’s County, Maryland

Grounded theory

35

52

Sangaramoorthy et al. (2017)1

Examine how stigma manifests among midlife and older BWLWH

--

--

--

--

Scott (2009)

No clear statement of aims. Study question: “What does AIDS mean?”

New Orleans, Louisiana

Qualitative descriptive and drawing

10

No mean age

Small et al. (2022)

Explore the experiences of BWLWH in healthcare settings as they relate to HIV treatment accessibility and medical mistrust

Los Angeles, California

Phenomenology and narrative

20

54

Subramaniam et al. (2017)

1) Gain an understanding of how WLWH dealt with and overcame health challenges; 2) Identify factors that contribute to sustaining resilience

Midwestern metropolitan area

Grounded theory

8

No mean age

Teti et al. (2015)

Uncover and understand women’s text and visual examples of their positive life transformations with HIV

Midwest and Northeast U.S. cities

Qualitative descriptive and photovoice

30

No mean age

Tufts et al. (2010)

Systematically collect data about the self-care experiences of WLWH

Southeastern metropolitan area

Qualitative descriptive

21

43.9

Watkins-Hayes et al. (2012)

Explicate the effects of HIV on four social domains: social support, labor force participation, childbearing and rearing, and intimate relationship

Chicago, Illinois

Grounded theory

30

36

Williams et al. (2022)

Explore the meaning and perceptions of HIV-related stigma among a sample of African American WLWH in Florida

Rural Florida

Phenomenology

13

51

  1. 1Data used for an additional publication