Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5569150 | Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care | 2016 | 38 Pages |
Abstract
Emotional disclosure is an expressive writing technique used in psychotherapy to process traumatic and stressful life experiences. While emotional disclosure interventions frequently use control groups, there are few qualitative analyses of these control groups. Our study's purpose was to analyze the control essays written by HIV-infected informants about their daily activities in an augmented written emotional disclosure intervention. Latent and manifest qualitative content analyses revealed prevalent contextual themes within the data. The emergent themes were socioeconomic status (SES), self-care, religiosity/spirituality, and social support. Emotional disclosure control subjects contributed substantial findings in terms of SES, self-care, resiliency, religiosity/spirituality, and social support and altruism.
Keywords
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Authors
Maria BA, Gail MD, PhD, Julie PhD, ANP, RN, FAAN,