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      Food meanings in HIV and AIDS caregiving trajectories: Ritual, optimism and anguish among caregivers in Lesotho

      research-article
      1 ,
      Psychology, Health & Medicine
      Taylor & Francis
      AIDS caregiving, food meanings, eating-related stress, stress proliferation

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          Abstract

          The article describes the caregiving responsibility to provide food for chronically ill family members and the meanings attached to food and eating when ill created stress for family caregivers. The results come from a qualitative phenomenological study using in-depth interviews with 21 family caregivers of chronically ill HIV and AIDS patients in one district in Lesotho. Analysis of the interview data showed that the caregivers attached profound meanings to food and feeding care recipients. Their perceptions about food as part of family life and caring, the role of food and eating in curbing disease progression, the link between food and medical efficacy and the link between food and life led to ritualised behaviour around food, and moments of optimism and anguish in caregiving. Patients’ behaviour in relation to food was in most instances inconsistent with the caregivers’ goals, thus leading this aspect of caregiving to induce stress. Services intended to support home-based caregivers and patients could contribute to the reduction of stress associated with food through suitably tailored food assistance and professional support to caregivers to enhance their competences and understanding of the dynamics of food intake as AIDS progressed.

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          Most cited references46

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          The sociology of chronic illness: a review of research and prospects

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            Cancer anorexia-cachexia syndrome: current issues in research and management.

            Akio Inui (2015)
            Cachexia is among the most debilitating and life-threatening aspects of cancer. Associated with anorexia, fat and muscle tissue wasting, psychological distress, and a lower quality of life, cachexia arises from a complex interaction between the cancer and the host. This process includes cytokine production, release of lipid-mobilizing and proteolysis-inducing factors, and alterations in intermediary metabolism. Cachexia should be suspected in patients with cancer if an involuntary weight loss of greater than five percent of premorbid weight occurs within a six-month period. The two major options for pharmacological therapy have been either progestational agents, such as megestrol acetate, or corticosteroids. However, knowledge of the mechanisms of cancer anorexia-cachexia syndrome has led to, and continues to lead to, effective therapeutic interventions for several aspects of the syndrome. These include antiserotonergic drugs, gastroprokinetic agents, branched-chain amino acids, eicosapentanoic acid, cannabinoids, melatonin, and thalidomide--all of which act on the feeding-regulatory circuitry to increase appetite and inhibit tumor-derived catabolic factors to antagonize tissue wasting and/or host cytokine release. Because weight loss shortens the survival time of cancer patients and decreases performance status, effective therapy would extend patient survival and improve quality of life.
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              The Ritual Process

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Psychol Health Med
                cphm
                Psychology, Health & Medicine
                Taylor & Francis
                1354-8506
                1465-3966
                10 February 2011
                5 February 2011
                : 16
                : 2
                : 190-202
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Human Science Research Council, Population Health, Health Systems & Innovation, Cape Town, South Africa
                Author notes
                Article
                10.1080/13548506.2010.525656
                3046643
                21328147
                9bf7c79f-e155-468f-9cf1-0f25cc080d1f
                © 2011 Taylor & Francis

                This is an open access article distributed under the Supplemental Terms and Conditions for iOpenAccess articles published in Taylor & Francis journals , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 15 February 2010
                : 14 September 2010
                Categories
                Research Article

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                aids caregiving,eating-related stress,stress proliferation,food meanings

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