When the AIDS pandemic emerged in 1981, the diagnosis of AIDS was considered terminal. Over the four decades since then, advances in medicine have transformed HIV/AIDS into chronic and manageable—if still severe— condition. Despite this success, the annual incidence of HIV remains high, with 1.3 million new HIV infections worldwide and more than 30,000 in the United States.
The chapters in this illuminating and concise new manual suggest that this continued high incidence is driven at least in part a lack of a biopsychosocial approach to HIV prevention and care. The authors suggest that destigmatizing mental illness and integrating psychiatric aspects into multispecialty medical treatment, research, and public health policy are essential for the next level of meaningful progress in both prevention of HIV transmission and in the care of persons infected with and affected by HIV.
Drawing on the expertise of over 20 contributors, this book is organized into four key sections that examine
Psychiatric screening, risk assessment, consultation, and evaluation in HIV care, including discussions of HIV testing, prevention, and stigma
Psychiatric illnesses associated with HIV infection, such as depressive, anxiety, substance-related and addictive, and neurocognitive disorders
The clinical management of psychiatric comorbidities in HIV-positive individuals, with attention to interactions between antiretrovirals and psychotropics, palliative and end-of-life care, and ethical considerations in HIV psychiatry
The challenges of providing HIV care against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic and in resource-limited settings
Offering quick-reference tables and take-home points that distill key information, this clinically focused manual is an essential resource for infectious disease specialists, internists, pediatricians, psychiatrists, psychologists, nurses, and social workers who care for patients across the lifespan.
Preface Part 1: Testing, Prevention, and Assessment for Psychiatric Disorders in HIV Care Chapter 1. Psychiatric Screening and Risk Assessment in HIV Care Chapter 2: Consultation, Assessment, and Evaluation in HIV Care Chapter 3: HIV Testing and Prevention Chapter 4: Identifying and Addressing HIV Stigma Part 2: Psychiatric Disorders Associated with HIV Infection Chapter 5. Depressive Disorders and HIV Infection Chapter 6. Anxiety Disorders and HIV Infection Chapter 7. Trauma and Stressor-Related Disorders and HIV Infection Chapter 8. Substance-Related and Addictive Disorders and HIV Infection Chapter 9. Neurocognitive Disorders and HIV Infection Chapter 10. Suicide and HIV Infection Part 3: Clinical Management of Psychiatric Multimorbidities in Persons with HIV Infection Chapter 11. Principles of HIV Treatment Chapter 12. Antiretrovirals and Psychotropics: Drug Interactions and Complications Chapter 13. Integrated and Collaborative Care of Psychiatric Multimorbidities in Persons with HIV Infection Chapter 14. Palliative and End-of-Life Care in Persons with HIV/AIDS Chapter 15. Ethical and Legal Challenges in HIV Psychiatry Part 4: Global Aspects of HIV Syndemics and Care Chapter 16. HIV Syndemics: Addressing Intersecting Health Challenges Chapter 17. Pandemic Crossroads: Providing HIV Care Amidst COVID-19 Chapter 18. Advancing HIV Care in Resource-Limited Settings