Abstract
HIV/AIDS continues to be a serious public health issue. As HIV changes from an acute disease to a more chronic illness, it places increased responsibility on family caregivers to provide on-going assistance. Based on a conceptual model of caregiving resilience, this study found high variation in caregiving outcomes with many caregivers demonstrating high levels of well-being despite adverse life circumstances. Factors that contributed significantly to caregiver well-being included income, caregiver health, discrimination, multiple loss, dispositional optimism and self-empowerment. These findings suggest that HIV/AIDS and caregiving entail more than stress and distress and that future research needs to consider caregiving within the context of a historically disadvantaged community, resilience of informal caregivers, and risk and protective factors at the personal, cultural and community levels. Such information is necessary to design community-based interventions to support informal caregivers and persons living with HIV/AIDS.