“That’s True Love:” Lived Experiences of Puerto Rican Perinatally HIV-Infected Youth within Their Families’ Context
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Sample Selection
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Multiple Coding (Inter-Rater Reliability)
3. Findings
3.1. Demographic Characteristics of the Study Population
3.2. Making Sense of Family
3.2.1. Meaning of Family
3.2.2. The “Dark Side” of Family
… Because she does not have it, she told others, because we have never gotten along well. [HAVE YOU TOLD HER HOW YOU FEEL?] The one who assumed that role, of talking to her, was mom, but she [her sister] still sort of treated her even more disrespectfully.
3.2.3. Healthcare Providers as Family
Their quality, the human quality that they show, they are very special to me. Very special to me… that is what I will miss the most, because I know that the medicine is there and any doctor can prescribe it. But it’s not only a medical issue, it’s that they care about me, they look after me… That is worth more than anything else.
… the doctors here, in project [Pediatric HIV/AIDS Research Program] they’ve provided me with great psychologists, great doctors who have helped me, you know, accept my condition. And always, since I was little, even when they have not told me what my condition was, they taught me to value myself, to not feel less than anyone. They taught me to be a confident person and so all those motivational words from the psychologists, from the doctors, well my family, also church groups… Aside from being health professionals, from being nurses or doctors, they’ve also been a helping hand, they’ve supported me... They’re like family to me.
3.3. Meaning of Parental Figures
3.3.1. Mother Figures
My mom… she’s my life, I love her, she’s always been there with me, always. [I feel] lucky to have her with me. To have her healthy. I am proud of her, because she really has overcome a lot, she’s a fighter.
3.3.2. Feelings towards Their Fathers
There they told me that it was that my father used drugs and infected my mother who infected me, and that was all. I can’t deny that I feel a lot of resentment toward him even if he’s dead… but I can’t forgive him.
At present the person I hate is my dad. Because knowing that he had it and the condition he had, he didn’t care and he didn’t take care of my mom. [SO HE KNEW?] He knew, actually, before being with my mom; three or four women in the same area where my mom lived died because of him.
When mom told me about what I had, and have, well I got upset with my father and, since then, I have never loved [him]. He is dead. He died at twenty-something... I’m glad he’s dead because otherwise I would kill him.
It’s like I say, I know that if it wasn’t for her I wouldn’t have gotten it because she’s my mom and I know she loved me and my dad too; they loved me, you know, so I don’t feel like that… I don’t saddle them with blame. The circumstances are to blame, because everyone had their thing and not everyone is perfect and they made mistakes. So I can’t judge them because of that, nor will I say that they’re bad …At least they gave me life and until this day I’m pretty big and fat [both of us laugh]; I really don’t feel bad about this…
3.3.3. Loss of Parents
My mother died the day of my 1st birthday. It’s very, very painful, because my mom was only 26 years old when she died, a girl. And not being able to, how do I say it, not being able to have her next to me, at the time I found out about the condition, and for her to help me, hear her voice, to know how she spoke, to feel her next to me, we would have gone through the same, we would have been able to understand each other so well. And not to have been able to live those experiences, well…
Yes, well, right, because, when I lost my mom, because of the condition, when I was five years old and she was 21. So that didn’t affect me at that point, it wasn’t about the condition itself. It was because I had lost my mom.
3.4. Other Parental Figures
3.4.1. Adoptive Parents
That was true love, because not everyone does that, not everyone does that. And besides, I was very little, had the condition, and then I got very sick. I don’t know what I had but I was close to death. And when I was born I weighed 4 pounds and I was really tiny, I was 13” or something like that, I was very small, really tiny. And when she saw me, well, she fell in love and adopted me.
3.4.2. Caregivers
Well, when I was very sick—you know, I was already [sick] at two months of age- my grandparents, who were always very close to my mother, were desperate. And when they took me to the hospital… and my grandmother was told (the diagnosis), well, she said she could not take it. She went into a depression, also because of my mother. My mother’s death was something that had a strong impact on them… But it was not just terrible for them… they did not know what to do in 1989 with a two-month old baby who was almost dying; the doctors told them “look, she is not likely to live long…” It was awful for them to accept that, and realize it, and try to live through it.
I went through drug addiction. That was another experience I went through after I found out about my condition. I began to hang out a lot with a cousin and I began to learn about pot, cigarettes, heroin, crack... I did try it, and used it at least once. And I have to tell you that I became really crazy. But I have no regrets because I think that was a process I had to go through because of what had happened. Now, what is important is to change and be different and show my children that it is wrong.
3.5. Transition to Adulthood: Becoming a Parent
Even if they don’t have it, they may be rejected because they’ll think that they have it. Because there are a lot of ignorant people in this life. And […] if they get picked on, then they’ll go home and they’ll start judging me, and blame me for having been treated like that, and… and having to live through that experience scares me. It scares me…
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions and Implications
6. Study Limitations
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix
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- Mi vida. Mi familia es mi todo. Familia es… (silencio) todo para mí, como esa partecita de uno (Emma, 20 años).
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- La hermana de mi abuela, que le decimos titi, ella cuando venía a visitarnos no quería coger de nuestra comida, no quería beber del mismo vaso (Luz, 23 años).
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- Como [Ella] no lo tiene, se ponen a divulgarlo porque nunca nos hemos llevado bien [¿LE HAS DICHO COMO TE SIENTES?] La que tomaba ese papel de hablarle era mami, pero a mi mai como que muchas veces [su hermana] le faltó el respeto peor (Kathy, 21 años).
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- La calidad, la calidad humano que son ellos. Ellos son muy especiales para mí. Muy especiales para mi….eso es lo más que voy a extrañar, porque yo sé que la medicina está y cualquier médico me puede recetar, pero no es cuestión médico, es que se preocupan por ti, te pregunten… eso vale más que todo (Arturo, 22 años).
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- Realmente, nunca me han vuelto a tratarme como me tratan en [la clínica de VIH/SIDA de la Universidad de Puerto Rico]… cuando voy a otra institución a tratarme, no es lo mismo (Esteban, 26 años).
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- Bueno, porque aquí los doctores, en [la clínica de VIH/SIDA de la UPR] me han tenido unos muy buenos psicólogos, muy buenos doctores que me han ayudado, a tu sabes, a aceptar mi condición. Y siempre, desde pequeño, aunque no me decían cual era la condición, pero si me enseñaron a valorarme a no sentirme menos que nadie. Me enseñaron a ser una persona segura y entonces todas esas palabras de motivación de parte de los psicólogos, de los doctores, pues de mi familia, también de grupos de la iglesia… Aparte de ser profesionales de la salud, de ser enfermeros o médicos, pues han sido también una mano amiga, han sido una mano amiga, me han apoyado y han sido más bien para mí como parte de una familia. Son como una familia para mí (Mauricio, 19 años).
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- Mi mamá…ella es mi vida, yo a ella la amo, ella siempre ha estado ahí conmigo, siempre. [Me siento] afortunada de tenerla conmigo. Tenerla sanita. Estoy orgullosa de ella, porque ella sí ha luchado mucho, una luchadora (Emma, 20 años).
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- Ahí me explicaron que era que papi usaba drogas y contagió a mami y que mami me contagió a mí, y así fue todo. No te voy a negar que siento mucho rencor hacia él aunque está muerto… pero no lo puedo perdonar (Fernanda, 29 años).
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- En estos momentos a quien yo odio es a mi papá. Porque el sabiendo lo que tenía, y la situación en la que él estaba no le importó y no cuidó a mi mama. [O SEA EL LO SABIA] Él lo sabía, de hecho, antes de estar con mi mamá, por causa de él ya habían muerto 3 o 4 mujeres de la misma área de donde vivía mi mamá (Isabel, 22 años).
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- Cuando mami me explicó por qué fue que lo tuve, lo tengo, pues me molesté con mi padre y desde entonces nunca [lo] he querido, él está muerto, él se murió a los veinti algo... Que bueno que está muerto porque si no,0 lo mato (Luz, 23 años).
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- Es como yo digo, yo sé que si hubiese sido por ella no lo hubiese tenido porque es mi Mai y yo sé que ella me quería y mi Pai también, ellos me aman, tu sabes que no me siento así… yo no los pongo como culpables. Culpables la circunstancias porque cada cual tiene su y no todo el mundo es perfecto y ellos tuvieron sus errores, pues, no puedo juzgarlos por eso, no me voy a poner a decir que ellos son malos, son esto, porque por lo menos me dieron la vida y hasta el día de hoy estoy bastante grande y gordo [carcajadas de ambos] de verdad que yo por lo menos no me siento mal así… (Alonso, 20 años).
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- Mi mamá falleció el mismo día de mi primer año. Es bien, bien doloroso, porque pues mi mamá a penas lo que tenía era 26 años cuando murió, una nena. Y el no poder, como te digo, no poder tenerla al lado, en los momentos que pues me enteré de la condición, y que pues me ayudara, escucharle la voz, saber cómo hablaba, el poderla sentir al lado mío, hubiéramos pasado lo mismo, nos hubiéramos podido entender tanto y el no poder haber vivido esas experiencias pues… (Isabel, 22 años).
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- Si, bueno, verdad, porque, cuando yo perdí a mi Mai’, por lo de la condición, cuando yo tenía 5 años y ella tenía 21. Eso a mí no me afectaba en ese momento, no era por na’ de la condición, en sí. En sí era como yo perdí a mi Maí. (Alonso, 20 años).
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- Que eso era amor de verdad, porque no todo el mundo hace eso, no todo el mundo hace eso. Y más yo, yo era chiquita, tenía la condición y después me dio, no sé qué me dio pero estaba a punto de morirme. Yo era, yo nací, pesando 4 libras, yo era una cosa bien chiquita, media 13” o algo así, yo era bien chiquitita, bien chiquitita. Y ella al verme, pues se enamoró de mí y pues me adoptó. (Victoria, 18 años).
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- Pues, yo estaba tan enfermita, tu sabes, yo a los dos meses de nacidas estaba [enferma]… mis abuelos siempre fueron muy cercanos con mi mamá, estaban en desespero. Y cuando me llevaron al hospital… a mi abuela le dijeron mi [diagnostico], ella no pudo [manejarlo]. Ella cayó en depresión, también por mi mamá. Al mi mamá fallecer, fue algo bien impactante para ellos… Pero [no sólo] fue impactante para ellos… no sabían que hacer en el 89 con una bebe de dos meses muriéndose, como quien dice. Los doctores le decían “mira ella no va a durar mucho.” Fue algo bien fuerte para ellos aceptar y reconocer y tratar de “lived trhough it” (Marina, 23 años).
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- Yo pasé por la drogadicción. Esa fue otra experiencia, que después que yo me enteré de mi condición. Me empecé a juntar mucho con una prima y empecé a conocer lo que era la marihuana, el cigarrillo, el perico, el crack. Todo eso lo probé, porque no puedo decir que me metí porque si no no estuviera aquí. Pero si lo probé, llegué a utilizarlo aunque sea una vez. Y te digo, yo me volví bien loquita, pero no me arrepiento porque creo que eso fue un proceso que tuve que vivir por lo que pasó. Ahora lo que importa es hacer el cambio y la diferencia y demostrarle a mis hijos que eso está mal (Isabel, 22 años).
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- Va a ser un poco difícil, porque no va a ser como un proceso normal. Voy a tener que estar más precavida que cualquier otra madre… (Emilia, 21 años).
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- [Hablando de la experiencia de ser madre] Brutal. Es buena, es difícil, pero es bueno (Luz, 23 años).
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- [Hablando de la experiencia de ser padre] Muy satisfactoria y enriquecedora. Muy buena de verdad (Arturo, 22 años).
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- Aunque no lo tengan van a quererlos discriminar, porque van a pensar que lo tienen. Porque hay mucha gente ignorante en esta vida. Y… si los pegan a relajar, que ellos lleguen a casa y me peguen a juzgar, que por culpa tuya me están tratando así, que…y tener que vivir es experiencia me da miedo. Me da miedo… (Isabel, 22 años).
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Silva-Suárez, G.; Bastida, E.; Rabionet, S.E.; Beck-Sagué, C.; Febo, I.; Zorrilla, C.D. “That’s True Love:” Lived Experiences of Puerto Rican Perinatally HIV-Infected Youth within Their Families’ Context. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2016, 13, 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13010007
Silva-Suárez G, Bastida E, Rabionet SE, Beck-Sagué C, Febo I, Zorrilla CD. “That’s True Love:” Lived Experiences of Puerto Rican Perinatally HIV-Infected Youth within Their Families’ Context. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2016; 13(1):7. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13010007
Chicago/Turabian StyleSilva-Suárez, Georgina, Elena Bastida, Silvia E. Rabionet, Consuelo Beck-Sagué, Irma Febo, and Carmen D. Zorrilla. 2016. "“That’s True Love:” Lived Experiences of Puerto Rican Perinatally HIV-Infected Youth within Their Families’ Context" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 13, no. 1: 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13010007
APA StyleSilva-Suárez, G., Bastida, E., Rabionet, S. E., Beck-Sagué, C., Febo, I., & Zorrilla, C. D. (2016). “That’s True Love:” Lived Experiences of Puerto Rican Perinatally HIV-Infected Youth within Their Families’ Context. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 13(1), 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13010007