Storylines of Aging with HIV: Shifts Toward Sense Making

Through this paper, we  explore  older adults’ experiences of living and aging with HIV.

Abstract: Aging with HIV is a new phenomenon. It is expected that by 2015, approximately half of adults living with HIV in the United States will be age 50 and older. We used narrative inquiry to explore how older adults with HIV storied their experience and made sense of aging. Over a 3.5-year period, we interviewed 5 older adults living with HIV for 13 to 24 years. In analyzing the coconstructed stories, we identify six storylines that enhance understanding and guide listening: embodiment of the illness, sense making, death and loss, secrets and stigma, identity, and seeking connection. We theorize that the degree to which one reconciles each storyline influences how well one lives with illness. We share a storied exemplar to illustrate these storylines in one participant’s experience of aging with HIV. These findings emphasize how vital is telling one’s illness story, because sense making happens in the telling.

Reference: Beuthin, R. E., Bruce, A., & Sheilds, L. (2015). Storylines of Aging with HIV: Shifts Toward Sense Making. Qualitative Health Research, 25(5), 612-621. doi:10.1177/1049732314553597