Julia Rozanova
Yale University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Julia Rozanova.
Health & Justice | 2015
Julia Rozanova; Shan-Estelle Brown; Ambika Bhushan; Ruthanne Marcus; Frederick L. Altice
BackgroundThis paper examines how family and social relations facilitate and inhibit adherence to antiretroviraltherapy (ART) for people living with HIV (PLH) who have underlying substance use disorders and are transitioningto the community post-incarceration.MethodsCombining the methods of inductive close reading and constantcomparison, we analyzed the data from 30 semi-structured interviews of PLH who had recently transitioned to thecommunity within the previous 90 days.ResultsThree central themes were anticipated as important socialrelationships post-release: self-reported family, friends and clinicians. Among these, four sub-themes (social isolation, ‘double jeopardy’, search for belonging, and trust and respect) emerged, highlighting how they impacted ART adherence. Post-release, participants returned to resource-poor communities where they experienced socialisolation. ART adherence was enabled by having a purpose in life, which correlated with having robust family support structures. Many former prisoners felt that a chasm between them and their families existed, both because of HIV stigma and their addiction problems. In this context, relationships with untrustworthy friends from their druguse networks led to relapse of drug use and risky behaviors, jeopardizing participants’ ART adherence and persistence. To avoid the double jeopardy, defined as seeking friends for support but who were also the ones who contributed to drug relapse, participants searched for new social anchors, which often included their healthcare providers who represented trusted and respected persons in their life.ConclusionsWhile some former prisonersperceived doctors as uncaring and their relationships asymmetrical, positive relationships with these providers,when respect and trust was mutual, reinforced the participants’ sense of belonging to what they called ‘the world that don’t do drugs’ and motivated them to adhere to ART.
Ageing & Society | 2016
Julia Rozanova; Edward Alan Miller; Terrie Wetle
ABSTRACT The media shape both what people consider significant and how people think about key issues. This paper explored the cultural beliefs and stereotypes that underlie media portrayals of nursing homes. The analysis of texts of 157 articles about nursing homes published from 1999 to 2008 on the front pages of four major-market American newspapers (The New York Times, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post) was conducted using a qualitative approach inspired by comparative narrative and critical discourse analysis. Results suggest two major themes, each with several narrative components: (a) managing disposable lives (bodies outliving bank accounts; making frailty affordable; and the economics of triage); and (b) retaining purchasing power as successful ageing (consumption as a sign of market participation, spending money as an indicator of autonomy; and financial planning as preparation for future decline). Thus, the results indicate that nursing home residency in-and-of-itself is not a marker of unsuccessful ageing. This, instead, depends, in part, on the extent of choice available as a result of the level of financial solvency. This study shines light on the betwixt and between zone that distinguishes the Third and Fourth Ages; that is, independence versus dependence in old age. If individuals in a nursing home retain control over the management of their lives through the maintenance of financial independence, even if physically frail, association of nursing home residence with the Fourth Age may be ameliorated.
Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2018
Alexei Zelenev; Portia Shea; Alyona Mazhnaya; Julia Rozanova; Lynn Madden; Ruthanne Marcus; Frederick L. Altice
BACKGROUND Opioid agonist therapies (OAT) in Ukraine were first introduced in 2004 not as addiction treatment, but for HIV prevention. Numerous obstacles have thwarted OAT scale-up, including individual constraints and structural barriers. METHODS A cross-sectional survey of 1613 opioid dependent people who inject drugs (PWID) were recruited in 2014-2015 using stratified sampling in Kyiv, Odesa, Mykolayiv, Dnipro and Lviv. Analysis was restricted to a subset of 811 PWID who never received OAT. Barriers to OAT were assessed based on reasons why study participants were reluctant to enroll into OAT. A Rasch model from the Item Response Theory was applied to 24 potential barriers, used to score their severity and estimate a latent composite measure for each persons willingness and ability to participate in OAT. RESULTS The Rasch model confirmed the cumulative nature of barriers with concerns over treatment efficacy, safety and tolerability being more prevalent than barriers related to logistical constraints, opportunity costs and social stigma. If barriers related to treatment perception and logistics were eliminated, the average barrier number would decrease from 10 to 2.2. Participants were more likely to have a higher resistance to OAT entry if they experienced fewer overdoses, did not attain higher education, were not previously incarcerated and if their peers did not have a higher level of resistance to OAT. CONCLUSIONS Understanding the interdependence of various barriers and attitudes toward OAT can improve the rate of OAT expansion and ameliorate entry into substance abuse treatment programs in Ukraine.
Qualitative Health Research | 2017
Julia Rozanova; Ruthanne Marcus; Faye S. Taxman; Martha J. Bojko; Lynn Madden; Scott O. Farnum; Alyona Mazhnaya; Sergii Dvoriak; Frederick L. Altice
Methadone maintenance therapy (MMT) treats opioid use disorder among people who inject drugs (PWID). To understand why PWID may voluntarily discontinue MMT, we analyzed data from 25 focus groups conducted in five Ukrainian cities from February to April 2013 with 199 participants who were currently, previously, or never on MMT. Using constant comparison method, we uncovered three themes explaining why PWID transition off MMT: (a) purposeful resistance to rigid social control associated with how MMT is delivered and to power asymmetries in provider–patient relationships, (b) self-management of a PWID’s “wounded identity” that is common in socially stigmatized and physically sick persons—MMT serves as a reminder of their illness, and (c) the quest for a “normal life” uninterrupted by daily MMT site visits, harassment, and time inefficiencies, resources, and social capital. Focusing on holistic principles of recovery would improve addiction treatment and HIV prevention in Ukraine and globally.
Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2018
Julia Rozanova; Olga Morozova; Lyuba Azbel; Chethan Bachireddy; Jacob M. Izenberg; Tetiana Kiriazova; Sergiy Dvoryak; Frederick L. Altice
Facing competing demands with limited resources following release from prison, people who inject drugs (PWID) may neglect health needs, with grave implications including relapse, overdose, and non-continuous care. We examined the relative importance of health-related tasks after release compared to tasks of everyday life among a total sample of 577 drug users incarcerated in Ukraine, Azerbaijan, and Kyrgyzstan. A proxy measure of whether participants identified a task as applicable (easy or hard) versus not applicable was used to determine the importance of each task. Correlates of the importance of health-related reentry tasks were analyzed using logistic regression, with a parsimonious model being derived using Bayesian lasso method. Despite all participants having substance use disorders and high prevalence of comorbidities, participants in all three countries prioritized finding a source of income, reconnecting with family, and staying out of prison over receiving treatment for substance use disorders, general health conditions, and initiating methadone treatment. Participants with poorer general health were more likely to prioritize treatment for substance use disorders. While prior drug injection and opioid agonist treatment (OAT) correlated with any interest in methadone in all countries, only in Ukraine did a small number of participants prioritize getting methadone as the most important post-release task. While community-based OAT is available in all three countries and prison-based OAT only in Kyrgyzstan, Kyrgyz prisoners were less likely to choose help staying off drugs and getting methadone. Overall, prisoners consider methadone treatment inapplicable to their pre-release planning. Future studies that involve patient decision-making and scale-up of OAT within prison settings are needed to better improve individual and public health.
Journal of Aging Studies | 2015
Kristine Theurer; W. Ben Mortenson; Robyn Stone; Melinda Suto; Virpi Timonen; Julia Rozanova
Aids and Behavior | 2016
Maxim Polonsky; Julia Rozanova; Lyuba Azbel; Chethan Bachireddy; Jacob M. Izenberg; Tetiana Kiriazova; Sergii Dvoryak; Frederick L. Altice
Milbank Quarterly | 2012
Edward Alan Miller; Denise A. Tyler; Julia Rozanova; Vincent Mor
Psychiatric Quarterly | 2016
Julia Rozanova; Paraskevi Noulas; Kathleen Smart; Alicia Roy; Steven M. Southwick; Larry Davidson; Ilan Harpaz-Rotem
Harm Reduction Journal | 2017
Lyuba Azbel; Julia Rozanova; Ingo Ilja Michels; Frederick L. Altice; Heino Stöver