Pengaruh Konseling Terhadap Self Stigma Pasien HIV/AIDS Dengan Pendekatan Teori Lawrence Green
Abstract
The stigma that occurs in society against people with HIV and AIDS has
an impact on sufferers to stigmatize themselves (Self Stigma). Negative self-
acceptance which causes a decrease in self-esteem and self-efficacy so that it
affects the individual's belief to be able to recover. The purpose of this study was
to analyze the effect of counseling on self-stigma of patients with the Lawrence
green theory approach. The research design was a pretest-posttest control group
design with a sample size of 40 respondents selected by purposive sampling
technique. The instrument used is a questionnaire. Counseling treatment of
respondents using the module. The statistical tests used were paired t-test and
independent t-test. The test results showed that the treatment group was 0.000 and
the control group was 0.104. Correlation coefficient 0.600. The independent t test
value of 0.001 means that there is a difference in the average number of self-
stigma in the treatment group and the average in the control group after
counseling. Counseling with Lawrence Green's theoretical approach can reduce
self-stigma so that HIV/AIDS patients think positively about themselves, do not
withdraw from the environment and are willing to behave in therapy for their own
healing.