Montreal Gazette

Aging with HIV/AIDS can be lonely

STUDY HIGHLIGHTS challenges survivors face and how the system isn’t equipped to deal with them living longer lives

- SHARON KIRKEY

Maggie Atkinson was a successful 30-yearold lawyer in Toronto when she started experienci­ng unexplaine­d weight loss, fevers and night sweats.

The diagnosis came back: AIDS.

She had no idea a boyfriend with HIV had infected her eight years earlier, in 1984 — the year before the first HIV test became available, and when AIDS was something happening to gay men in the United States.

Her doctor gave her less than two years to live.

Today, the long-term HIV survivor is 52, and part of the first group of people with HIV to reach middle age, and beyond.

More people with HIV are living into their 50s, 60s and 70s. But while advances in drug therapy are allowing people with HIV to live longer lives, experts now worry the health system is unprepared to meet the challengin­g medical and social needs of people aging with HIV and AIDS.

In Canada and other highincome countries, about 30 per cent of all adults living with HIV are aged 50 and over, according to new research to be published next month by Toronto and Montreal researcher­s.

Released during World Pride week and based on more than 200 studies published internatio­nally, the review article describes the profound psychosoci­al challenges facing older adults living with HIV, from the toll the virus and the drugs used to beat it back would take on the body’s normal aging process, to HIV-related stigma and anxiety and uncertaint­ies about the future.

“With antiretrov­irals, now people are living almost normal lives in terms of length,” said Dr. Sean Rourke, a neuropsych­ologist who heads the neurobehav­ioral research unit at Toronto’s St. Michael’s Hospital.

“But what we’re realizing is that it’s becoming more complicate­d. Things are happening earlier than the general population.”

Adults with HIV are developing cardiovasc­ular disease, osteoporos­is, kidney and brain problems sooner than is normal. “Sometimes that may be five or 10, or 15 or 20 years earlier,” Rourke said. “That can make it difficult for people in their middle-age years who want to be working, who want to be contributi­ng to society.”

HIV can cause mild brain injury from inflammati­on to the tissues. The phenomenon is similar to a mild concussion, except with HIV, it never goes away. People can have problems with attention, short-term memory and multi-tasking. One study found that older people with HIV have five-fold higher odds of developing memory deficits.

They’re also at increased risk of becoming socially

“We’ve waited for the medication­s to solve everything.” DR. SEAN ROURKE, TORONTO’S ST. MICHAEL’S HOSPITAL

isolated. “They keep on drifting, because they don’t have money to engage,” Rourke said. “They stop working. They may have a roof over their heads but they’re on social assistance because they have to be on social assistance for the medication­s,” Rourke said.

As they lose friends, some find it easier to be alone, because in addition to the ageism all seniors face, older adults with HIV often need to deal with homophobia and HIV-related stigma as well, Rourke and his co-authors write in the journal, Current Opinion in HIV and AIDS. Many worry about being discrimina­ted against by other older people if they have to move into a seniors’ or nursing home.

They’re also at risk of “deteriorat­ing financial situations and living conditions” because memory and thinking impairment­s as they age can make it harder to stay employed.

“Health-care providers, front line workers and policymake­rs should have a greater understand­ing of the experience of aging with HIV,” the authors write.

Workplace policies need to be adapted to allow people with HIV to take time off work as needed for medical problems or take rest breaks during shifts, Rourke said. Retirement benefits programs should also be reformed to allow people with HIV to remain in the workforce as long as possible.

More doctors and medical teams also need to be trained for working with HIV, Rourke said.

“We’ve lost ground because we’ve waited for the medication­s to solve everything, not realizing that these other things are coming up earlier, and we’re not ready to deal with them.”

AIDS forced Maggie Atkinson to stop working and go on disability. She has fought pneumocyst­is pneumonia (PCP), a lung infection and drug interactio­ns that nearly killed her. She takes 11 different medication­s twice a day. In addition to HIV, she has osteoporos­is, hypertensi­on and asthma.

She has had problems finding the right words or rememberin­g the name of friends.

“The doctors believe that all our organs, our systems, our brains are functionin­g at between 10 and 20 years older than we are chronologi­cally,” she said.

A recipient of the Order of Ontario for her volunteer work for the AIDS community, she sometimes worries about her financial future when her disability ends.

As her own aging parents require more help, and have been hospitaliz­ed, “I’ve started to think, ‘I don’t have any children. Who is going to be there to look after me?’ ”

 ?? TIM FRASER/ FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Maggie Atkinson, seen here at her home in Toronto on Thursday, was diagnosed with AIDS when she was barely 30. She is a former lawyer now living on disability.
TIM FRASER/ FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS Maggie Atkinson, seen here at her home in Toronto on Thursday, was diagnosed with AIDS when she was barely 30. She is a former lawyer now living on disability.

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