That has left survivors like Lassiter thriving. But it also means he and others need to figure out how to live much longer lives than they ever anticipated having, with all the physical and mental health challenges that come with it.
“My reflections are leading me to a place where I am working through the [post-traumatic stress] that I never even knew I had,” Lassiter said.
Nearly half of all people living with HIV/AIDS in the United States are 50 and older, according to the National Institute on Aging. By 2030, researchers estimate that older survivors will represent as much as 70% of people living with this chronic disease.
Dr. Jay Kostman, chief medical officer at Philadelphia FIGHT, said health care is now shifting from simply keeping people alive to other primary care and health issues that aging HIV patients are now facing.
“You have to shift your gears to say, ‘Okay, we’re controlling the virus, but our patients have heart disease and are having heart attacks and strokes,’” he said.
Ongoing research is focused on identifying what health issues in older patients may be attributable to the virus and treatment medications versus genetics, other factors or even just aging itself.
Early findings suggest the disease puts survivors at a higher risk of developing cognitive, motor and mood disorders, frailty and cardiovascular disease.
Mental health and post-traumatic stress are also common themes that Kostman sees among his aging HIV patients.
“So, what it’s been like to live with HIV for a long period of time, how it’s affected their mental health, how it’s affected their relationship with family, with children, partners, parents,” he said.
Jeff Haskins remembers the anxiety, stress and trauma he lived through during the height of the HIV/AIDs epidemic, including the death of his partner.
He said those feelings have unexpectedly resurfaced later in life during major moments, like when he witnessed the 9/11 terrorist attacks while he was in New York City, the loss of both his parents and the COVID-19 pandemic.
“My anxiety rises and I’m always trying to just go through the mood changes and [asking], ‘Why am I feeling this way?’” Haskins said. “I’ll be like, ‘Oh, these feelings are back again, why are they here? I thought I was doing well.’”