Reauthoring One's Own Life in the Face of Being HIV+: Promoting Healthier Narratives with Metacognitive Interpersonal Therapy |
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Authors: | Giancarlo Dimaggio Caterina Conti Paul H. Lysaker Raffaele Popolo Giampaolo Salvatore Sonia A. Sofia |
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Affiliation: | 1. Centro di Terapia Metacognitiva Interpersonale, Rome, Italy;2. Roudebush Veterans Administration Medical Center, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA, and Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA;3. Division of Infectious Disease, University of Catania, Italy |
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Abstract: | We describe here a narrative-based psychotherapy for a woman in her 40s who had been HIV+ since the age of 21 and who suffered from posttraumatic symptoms related to having received the diagnosis. She had also suffered from self-stigma and had lost the capacity to envision a future filled with hope. Treating individuals with HIV who face posttraumatic symptoms and stigma can be challenging for the clinician. A narrative approach to therapy can be helpful for these persons, in order to overcome symptoms, build a more benevolent self-image, feel accepted by society, and promote posttraumatic growth. Current evidence indicates that such an approach is mostly lacking. We describe how we applied metacognitive interpersonal therapy—an approach rooted in narrative constructivism. By using this treatment, the patient could overcome posttraumatic symptoms, participate in social activities after years of avoidance and isolation, and recover her sense of being a person able to make plans for the future with strength and dignity. Discussion includes ideas of how to generalize some of the mechanisms that have likely been effective in this therapy to other individuals with HIV. |
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