1. 'My Death Will Not [Be] in Vain': Testimonials from Last Gift Rapid Research Autopsy Study Participants Living with HIV at the End of Life
- Author
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David A. Wohl, Stephen A. Rawlings, Kelly E. Perry, Sara Gianella, Davey M. Smith, Sogol S. Javadi, Kushagra Mathur, Hursch Patel, John A. Sauceda, Susanna Concha-Garcia, Andy Kaytes, Megan Lo, Susan J. Little, Karine Dubé, Jeff Taylor, Steven Hendrickx, and Brandon Brown
- Subjects
end of life ,Male ,Risk ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Clinical Sciences ,education ,Immunology ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Terminally ill ,HIV Infections ,Context (language use) ,Last Gift ,medicine.disease_cause ,Altruism ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Research ,Virology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Gratitude ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Meaning (existential) ,media_common ,sociobehavioral research ,humanities ,HIV cure research ,Death ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,altruism ,Content analysis ,Moral obligation ,Family medicine ,HIV/AIDS ,Female ,Sociobehavioral ,Autopsy ,rapid research autopsy ,Psychology - Abstract
End-of-life (EOL) HIV cure-related research provides a novel approach to studying HIV reservoirs. The Last Gift is a rapid autopsy research study at the University of California San Diego that enrolls terminally ill people living with HIV (PLWHIV) with a desire to contribute to HIV cure-related research. We conducted in-depth baseline and follow-up interviews with Last Gift study participants. We analyzed interview data applying conventional content analysis. Since summer 2017, 13 participants have been enrolled (n = 11 males and 2 females; aged 45-89 years) and 8 participants interviewed. Terminal illnesses included cancers, heart diseases, and neurodegenerative illnesses. Our analysis revealed five key themes: (1) The Last Gift study has tremendous meaning for participants at the end of their life. (2) HIV-specific altruism was a primary motivator to join the Last Gift study, nested within the context of community, scientific advancement, and moral obligation. (3) Participants did not expect physical benefits yet they perceived emotional/psychological, financial, and societal/scientific benefits. (4) There were minimal participant-perceived risks and concerns. (5) Last Gift participants expressed immense gratitude toward study staff. The Last Gift study provides a framework for ethical HIV cure-related research at EOL and highlighted participants' perspectives, motivations, and experiences. Knowing how PLWHIV understand and experience such studies will remain critical to designing ethical, fully informed HIV cure research protocols that are acceptable to PLWHIV.
- Published
- 2020