Spirituality and Psychological Quality of Life in HIV+ Adults
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Description
This poster examines how people living with HIV/AIDS use spiritual beliefs to interpret the meaning of or perhaps appraise illness in such a way that it has a strong positive association with higher levels of psychological quality of life.
The Center for Psychosocial Health Research is a multidisciplinary group that draws upon anthropology, behavioral medicine, education, psychology, public health, and sociology to pioneer research on psychosocial phenomena involved in healthy living. In addition to pursuing basic research on wellness within a chronic illness context, the Center provides psychoeducational services to communities in the DFW area and comprehensive learning experiences for students.
This poster examines how people living with HIV/AIDS use spiritual beliefs to interpret the meaning of or perhaps appraise illness in such a way that it has a strong positive association with higher levels of psychological quality of life.
This poster is part of the following collection of related materials.
UNT Scholarly Works
Materials from the UNT community's research, creative, and scholarly activities and UNT's Open Access Repository. Access to some items in this collection may be restricted.
Mc Kelroy, Joshua L. & Vosvick, Mark A.Spirituality and Psychological Quality of Life in HIV+ Adults,
poster,
August 10, 2006;
(https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc855982/:
accessed April 19, 2025),
University of North Texas Libraries, UNT Digital Library, https://digital.library.unt.edu;
crediting UNT Center for Psychosocial Health Research.