Medha Vyavaharkar
University of South Carolina
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Publication
Featured researches published by Medha Vyavaharkar.
Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care | 2010
Medha Vyavaharkar; Linda Moneyham; Sara J. Corwin; Ruth P. Saunders; Lucy Annang; Abbas Tavakoli
&NA; This cross‐sectional study examined relationships between HIV‐related stigma, social support, and depression in a sample of 340 HIV‐infected African American women living in rural areas of the Southeastern United States. Three aspects of social support (availability of different types of support, sources of support, and satisfaction with support) and two aspects of HIV‐related stigma (perceived stigma and internalized stigma) were measured. Perceived availability of support (p < .0001), sources of support (p = .03), satisfaction with support (p = .003), perceived stigma (p < .0001), and internalized stigma (p < .0001) were all significantly correlated with depression. Social support variables were negatively correlated and stigma variables were positively correlated with depression. HIV‐related perceived stigma and internalized stigma were found to mediate the effect of sources of available support on depression. Study findings have implications for designing and implementing interventions to increase social support and decrease HIV‐related stigma in order to decrease depression among African American women with HIV disease.
Clinical Nursing Research | 2005
Kenneth D. Phillips; Linda Moneyham; Carolyn Murdaugh; Mary R. Boyd; Abbas Tavakoli; Kirby L. Jackson; Medha Vyavaharkar
This study examined the relationships among subjective sleep disturbance, depressive symptoms, and adherence to medications among HIV-infected women. HIV-infected women ( N = 173) were recruited through community AIDS service organizations throughout South Carolina. Participants completed the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), the Centers for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), and a modified version of the Adults AIDS Clinical Trials Group Adherence Baseline Questionnaire. Women who reported greater sleep disturbance also reported a higher level of depressive symptoms and reported poor adherence to their medication regimen. Depression helped to explain the relationship between sleep quality and adherence. Results indicate that assessment and management of sleep disturbance and depressive symptoms in women with HIV disease is important to promote medication adherence.
Aids Education and Prevention | 2011
Medha Vyavaharkar; Linda Moneyham; Sara J. Corwin; Abbas Tavakoli; Ruth P. Saunders; Lucy Annang
This cross-sectional study examined the relationships between social support, HIV disclosure, and depression among 340 rural African American women with HIV disease living in the southeastern United States. Three aspects of social support (perceived availability of support, sources of available support, and satisfaction with available support) were measured along with HIV disclosure and depression. Perceived availability of support (p < .0001), sources of support (p = .03), satisfaction with support (p = .003), and HIV disclosure (total and to children; p = .05 and .04, respectively) were significantly and inversely correlated with depression. Perceived availability of support and satisfaction with support mediated the relationship between HIV disclosure and depression. If confirmed in longitudinal studies, these findings have implications for designing and implementing interventions supporting African American women with HIV disease in disclosing their HIV status appropriately, particularly to their children. In long run, appropriate self-disclosure may help decrease depression and improve quality of life among HIV infected African American women living in limited resource settings.
Health Care for Women International | 2009
DeAnne K. Hilfinger Messias; Linda Moneyham; Medha Vyavaharkar; Carolyn Murdaugh; Kenneth D. Phillips
Our aim in this study was to explore HIV/AIDS peer counseling from the perspective of women actively engaged in this work within the context of a community-based program in rural areas of the southeastern United States. Based on this research we suggest that the embodied work of HIV/AIDS peer counselors is constructed around their personal identities and experiences. This work involves gaining entry to other HIV-positive womens lives, building relationships, drawing on personal experiences, facing issues of fear and stigma, tailoring peer counseling for diversity, balancing risks and benefits, and terminating relationships. Peer counselors recognize the personal and collective value of their work, which, like much of womens work within the context of family and community, lacks public visibility and acknowledgment. We discuss implications for the training and support of peer-based interventions for HIV and other womens health issues across diverse contexts and settings.
Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved | 2008
Medha Vyavaharkar; Linda Moneyham; Sara Corwin
This qualitative study explored perceptions and experiences of HIV-positive rural African American women regarding availability, accessibility, and quality of health care and social services. Twenty-two women residing in rural areas of South Carolina were recruited to participate in one of three focus groups. A conceptual model of health services utilization was used to guide the study and served as a framework for coding data. Verbatim transcripts of group discussions were analyzed using content analysis to code and identify data categories. Data revealed common perceptions of lack of services and inferior quality of available services to meet some of their most important needs. Overall, findings provide a picture of women whom the health care/social services system fails to serve. The findings have significant implications for increasing resources and designing interventions that empower these women and enhance their quality of life.
Journal of Rural Health | 2012
Kevin J. Bennett; Janice C. Probst; Medha Vyavaharkar; Saundra H. Glover
PURPOSE We estimated the 30-day readmission rate of Medicare beneficiaries with diabetes, across levels of rurality. METHODS We merged the 2005 Medicare Chronic Conditions 5% sample data with the 2007 Area Resource File. The study population was delimited to those with diabetes and at least 1 hospitalization in the year. Unadjusted readmission rates were estimated across levels of rurality. Multivariate logistic regression estimated the factors associated with readmissions. FINDINGS Overall, 14.4% had a readmission; this was higher among urban (14.9%) than rural (12.9%) residents. The adjusted odds indicated that remote rural residents were less likely to have a readmission (OR 0.74, 0.57-0.95) than urban residents. Also, those with a 30-day physician follow-up visit were more likely to have a readmission (OR 2.25, 1.96-2.58) than those without a visit. CONCLUSION The factors that contribute to hospital readmissions are complex; our findings indicate that access to follow-up care is highly associated with having a readmission. It is possible that residents of remote rural counties may not receive necessary readmissions due to lower availability of such follow-up care. Policy makers should continue to monitor this apparent disparity to determine the impact of these lower rates on both patients and hospitals alike.
Issues in Mental Health Nursing | 2011
Kenneth D. Phillips; Linda Moneyham; Sandra P. Thomas; Mary Gunther; Medha Vyavaharkar
The South has more AIDS cases than any other region of the US, with most new diagnoses among African American women (56%). In a previous study, a peer counseling intervention for rural women with HIV/AIDS was developed and tested. The purpose of this analysis was to describe, from the peer counselors’ perspective, the predominant concerns of the women, contextualized by living in isolated, impoverished circumstances in the rural Deep South. Following home visits, peer counselors recorded a description of the encounter. A multidisciplinary qualitative research group extracted, coded, and thematized the chief concerns and context of the womens lives. Findings provide a vivid portrait of HIV-infected women experiencing deeply troubling psychological and physiological symptoms of HIV/AIDS against the contextual ground of poverty and isolation. Themes include: (1) struggle/effort; (2) stigma/hiding; (3) loss/depression; and (4) independence/ dependence. These women lived in extremely difficult life circumstances that reflected not only a devastating chronic illness, but a life of poverty and abuse. Appropriate care for HIV-infected women living in the rural Deep South will need to address the whole context of their lives.
SAGE Open | 2014
Ana Lòpez-De Fede; Medha Vyavaharkar; Jessica D. Bellinger
The use of antipsychotics in very young children is of concern given the lack of empirical evidence in their efficacy and long-term impact on children’s health. This study examined the prescription of antipsychotics among children aged ≤5 years enrolled in a state Medicaid program. Secondary data analysis was conducted using the Medicaid administrative data of a southeastern state. Using SAS 9.3, descriptive statistics were performed to examine socio-demographic characteristics, psychiatric diagnoses, off-label use, receipt of medications from multiple psychotropic drug classes, and receipt of non-pharmacologic psychiatric services among children aged ≤5 years who received antipsychotic prescriptions in calendar year (CY) 2011. A total of 112 children in the target age group received antipsychotics in CY 2011, the most common prescription being risperidone. The most common listed psychiatric diagnosis was attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Two in five children received antipsychotics for off-label use. Three in four children also received medications from at least one other psychotropic drug class. More than half did not receive adjunct psychiatric services. State-level policies offering specific guidance and recommendations for antipsychotic use among very young children are urgently needed. Future research is warranted to examine long-term impact of such practices on children’s growth and development.
Aids Patient Care and Stds | 2007
Medha Vyavaharkar; Linda Moneyham; Abbas Tavakoli; Kenneth D. Phillips; Carolyn Murdaugh; Kirby L. Jackson; Gene Meding
Aids and Behavior | 2012
Medha Vyavaharkar; Linda Moneyham; Carolyn Murdaugh; Abbas Tavakoli