Couples
Raymond A. Smith
A couple is composed of two persons in a committed sexual or
romantic relationship, usually over a significant period of time.
Couples may be opposite-sex or same-sex, married or unmarried,
monogamous or nonmonogamous, and cohabitating or living apart and
may or may not have children.
In terms of HIV/AIDS, couples
may be either HIV seroconcordant, with both members being either
sero-positive or seronegative, or HIV serodiscordant, with the
partners having different serostatuses. For most couples, HIV/AIDS
raises two paramount concerns: the risk of HIV transmission and the
likelihood of illness of one or both partners.
Couples in which both partners
believe themselves to be HIV-negative have it as their challenge to
remain that way. Statistically, most couples worldwide are
seroconcordant-seronegative, especially in populations and regions
that do not have a high level of HIV seroprevalence. These couples
may be the least likely to practice safer sex consistently with each
other, particularly if they have agreed to be sexually monogamous or
if they want children. Such couples may feel little incentive to put
up with the more unpleasant demands of safer sex and, indeed, may
find that issues involved with avoiding the exchange of bodily
fluids damages the quality of their sexual and personal lives.
Shared HIV-negative status may also encourage a couple to remain
together rather than face the risk of infection from partners of
unknown status.
If both partners who believe
themselves to be in a seroconcordant-seronegative relationship are
indeed HIV-negative and remain so over time, then HIV/AIDS poses
little direct risk to them. However, some people do not know their
actual serostatus but simply presume themselves to be uninfected
based on their personal histories or prior HIV test results. A lack
of knowledge about HIV transmission and psychological denial may
lead some people to underestimate their likelihood of infection.
One member of the couple may
become infected by sexual activity outside the relationship or by
other routes, such as injecting drug use, blood transfusions, or
occupational exposure. A member of a couple who becomes infected
during the course of a relationship may unknowingly pass HIV along
to his or her partner. Even if one-half of the couple knows him- or
herself to be infected, he or she may find it difficult to suggest
condom use, because this would be tantamount to admitting to sexual
infidelity or unsafe drug use. Even couples with explicit agreements
to discuss any risky behavior outside their relationship may find it
difficult to do so in practice.
Couples in which both partners
are seropositive face a different set of concerns. Such couples
occur most frequently in certain risk groups, such as gay men and
injecting drug users, or in geographic regions with high HIV
seroprevalence. For these couples, transmission may seem to be a
less pressing concern. However, such couples run the risk of
reinfection, in which one partner infects the other with a different
and potentially more virulent strain of HIV, some currently unknown
cofactor that might worsen their condition, or a sexually
transmitted disease.
Nonetheless, couples in which
both partners are HIV-positive may be tempted to ignore safer-sex
practices and/or to share needles freely out of a sense that such
activity poses little additional risk. Indeed, shared seropositivity
may be a source of comfort and solidarity for some couples, although
this may be less the case if one partner was the agent of infection
for the other.
Pregnancy, either accidental or
intentional, is of particular concern for
seroconcordant-seropositive heterosexual couples, given the risks of
maternal transmission and premature death of the parents. Couples
who already have children must take care to make provisions for
these children, who may themselves be infected and who run a high
risk of being orphaned.
Seroconcordant-seropositive
couples face a high degree of uncertainty about the future, because
both members must contend with the likelihood of future illness.
Yet, the two partners may be at very different stages of disease
progression; rather than growing sick and dying together, one
partner may still be asymptomatic while the other has already
progressed to AIDS. In these cases, the partner who is well may be
faced with caregiving, either while healthy or while in declining
health. The couple may need to deal with changes in mutual
dependence, debilitating opportunistic infections, sexual
dysfunction, cognitive impairment, anticipatory grief over the death
of the sicker partner, and concern about the future health of the
healthier partner.
Meanwhile, psychological and
practical support is often less available for well caregivers than
for their sick partners. In relationships that are not sanctioned by
law, the well partner may also have to contend with difficulties
regarding spousal insurance coverage, medical decision making, legal
guardianship, inheritance, and unwelcome involvement by parents and
other biological relatives.
Serodiscordant couples raise the
thorniest set of issues, because they must face major concerns about
both transmission and caregiving. Although many HIV-negative
individuals might not choose to become involved with someone who is
HIV-positive, the seroprevalence rates in some communities are so
high that such couplings are almost unavoidable. In other cases,
partners may already be committed to one another before their
serodiscordant status is discovered or discussed.
Out of concern about
transmission, some serodiscordant couples become overly cautious and
all but cease sexual relations. Others may become fatalistic about
the inevitability of transmission and take unwise risks. Even if the
partners find a level of sexual interaction with which they are both
comfortable, accidental slipups and condom breaks do occur. Thus,
the prospect of infection is always present, causing the infected
partner to worry about transmitting the virus, and the uninfected
partner may experience "survivor guilt" to the point of wishing to
become infected.
Serodiscordant heterosexual
couples who wish to have children must be concerned about sexual
transmission between partners and about maternal transmission in the
womb if the woman is the infected partner. Although a number of
technologies have been explored to remove HIV from semen, attempting
a pregnancy remains risky for serodiscordant couples.
As a seropositive partner
becomes ill, another set of issues arise around caregiving. Although
the basic concerns are the same for serodiscordant couples as for
seroconcordant-seropositive couples, the divide between the two
serodiscordant partners can be greater, as the two do not share the
same HIV status. "Survivor guilt" may become even more acute at this
stage, impairing the ability of the seronegative partner to protect
him- or herself as well as the seropositive partner. Alternatively,
some seronegative partners may decide that they are unable or
unwilling to help their partner deal with severe illness and abandon
the partner to care for him- or herself. In a few cases, the well
partner may even be called upon to assist with the suicide of the
sick partner.
Related Entries:
Bereavement; Caregiving;
Children; Families; Family Policy; Gender Roles; Homophobia;
Maternal Transmission; Monogamy
Key Words:
caregiving, couples, marriage,
partners, seroconcordance, serodiscordance, spouses
Further Reading
Folkman, S., M. A. Chesney, and
A. Christopher-Richards, "Stress and Coping in Caregiving Partners
of Men with AIDS," Psychiatric Clinics of North America 17:1
(1994), pp. 35-53
Kennedy, C. A., J. H. Skurnick,
M. Foley, and D. B. Louria, "Gender Differences in HIV-Related
Psychological Distress in Heterosexual Couples," AIDS Care
7:supplement 1 (1995), pp. S33-S38
Powell-Cope, G. M., "The
Experiences of Gay Couples Affected by HIV Infection,"
Qualitative Health Research 5:1 (1995), pp. 36-62
Remien, R. H., A.
Carballo-Diéguez, and G. Wagner, "Intimacy and Sexual Risk Behavior
in Serodiscordant Male Couples," AIDS Care 7:4 (1995), pp.
429-438
Seidlin, M., M. Vogler, E. Lee,
Y. S. Lee, and N. Dubin, "Heterosexual Transmission of HIV in a
Cohort of Couples in New York City," AIDS 7 (1993), pp.
1247-1254
The
Encyclopedia of AIDS: A Social, Political, Cultural, and Scientific
Record of the HIV Epidemic,
Raymond A. Smith, Editor. Copyright © 1998, Raymond A. Smith.
Carried by permission of Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. Encyclopedia
of AIDS $25 US/832 pp/Illustrated
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