The PozQoL scale

The PozQoL scale is a concise tool designed to measure the quality of life of people living with HIV.

Developed at La Trobe University in collaboration with people living with HIV from across Australia, PozQoL helps to:

  • Measure changes in quality of life among people living with HIV
  • Better understand the needs of people living with HIV
  • Ensure more person-centred care for people living with HIV
  • Evaluate the impact of services and programs for people living with HIV

Explore our site to see how you can integrate PozQoL into your work with people living with HIV.

A senior research manager from the National Association of People with HIV Australia shares his excitement about PozQoL and its importance for people living with HIV (transcript below).

Explore our site

We designed the resources on our site to support you in enhancing your application of the PozQoL scale and improving your engagement with people living with HIV. Find detailed guides, real-world stories, and practical tools.

Good quality of life while living with HIV: a transgender woman and her daughter enjoying being together – learn more about how measuring quality of life can enhance the wellbeing of people living with HIV.

Discover the impact of quality of life on HIV care

  • Understand what quality of life means for people affected by HIV
  • Learn how measuring quality of life can yield more impactful results
  • Explore why a focus on quality of life is crucial in HIV care

Good quality of life while living with HIV: young friends enjoying each other's company – learn more about the research project that developed the PozQoL scale.

Learn about the PozQoL project

  • Discover the advantages of incorporating PozQoL into your practice
  • Dive into the history and development of the PozQoL scale
  • See how the PozQoL scale was tested and validated

Good quality of life while living with HIV: a young gay couple embracing – learn how to use the PozQoL scale to measure quality of life among people living with HIV.

Learn how to use the PozQoL scale

  • Get step-by-step guidance on administering the PozQoL scale
  • Understand and interpret PozQoL scores for better patient outcomes
  • Integrate PozQoL insights into your daily professional activities

A man living with HIV in Uruguay painting a chair – download the PozQoL scale in multiple languages and access tools to help you implement PozQoL in your work

Access the PozQoL scale and tools

  • Download the PozQoL scale in multiple languages
  • Access essential tools to facilitate your use of PozQoL

A man living with HIV enjoying time with a friend – read about the different ways real people are using PozQoL in their work

Explore PozQoL success stories

  • Read stories from users who have seen real benefits using PozQoL
  • Discover diverse applications of PozQoL in different settings

A smiling man living with HIV in Portugal sitting in a chair in a sunny room – find out more about using PozQoL in clinical environments

Guidance for clinicians

  • Access resources designed to optimise the use of PozQoL in clinical environments
  • Enhance patient care through targeted PozQoL applications

A woman living with HIV in Nairobi smiles while embracing a friend – find out more about using PozQoL in community and peer work with people living with HIV

Resources for community and peer workers

  • Explore tools and insights for using PozQoL in community and peer engagements
  • Enhance impact evaluation of your peer and community programs

A young man living with HIV in Germany smiles while working on a computer – find out more about using PozQoL in research with people living with HIV

Research with PozQoL

  • Find resources to support PozQoL research initiatives
  • Enhance your research with people living with HIV

PozQoL was developed by


Video transcript

Hello! I’m Dr John Rule. I work as the Senior Research Manager for the National Association of People Living with HIV Australia. I’m wearing their t-shirt today.

I’m a person living with HIV and I’ve been involved in research in the HIV area for quite a long time.

It’s very exciting that the PozQoL website has now been launched. And it’s incredibly exciting that the PozQoL study has gotten to this point.

It’s important because this concept of the quality of life of people living with HIV… We really need to understand that this is a diverse experience.

So, it’s not only gay men but also women living with HIV. People from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island backgrounds in Australia living with HIV: people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds; people who have been diagnosed short term, long term, older, younger.

The great thing about the PozQoL study is that it provides an instrument which can capture those diverse experiences and measure and record those experiences. So that a person’s particular situation or their quality of life at a particular moment can be shared, either with healthcare providers or health service providers.

And, importantly, it’s a reflection back to the person themselves about their changes in quality of life, which we hope are always able to be recorded as improving.

The people at the Australian Research Centre of Sex, Health and Society, led by Dr Graham Brown, have done an incredible job in tapping into these domains of our experiences: psychological, social, health, functional. And I think those ‘domains’ (that they’re called in the PozQoL study) speak to the multi-dimensional experience of living with HIV in Australia at the moment.

This is so valuable to have this instrument developed. It’s so important that we will be able to use it in our community organisations. And also then extending, hopefully, to being able to be used by healthcare workers and clinicians, we hope, who will be able to use our own self-reporting about how we’re feeling to help in the clinical encounter and discussion about the management of our health.

Look, this has been a long journey. People living with HIV 20 years ago… We couldn’t think about this concept of quality of life because we’d only just moved into the phase of taking antiretroviral therapies and beginning to understand that with the advent of antiretroviral therapies, we did have a future.

About 10 years ago, with the study team, we’ve all started talking about the importance of then assessing the quality of life. And here we are now in 2020 with a great instrument that’s been developed and a dynamic website that’s being launched about the PozQoL work.

So, congratulations to all the team who have been working on this. But also, a big thank you from — to the extent that I can represent people living with HIV — thank you that this work has been prepared and we hope that it continues to be used.

Cheers

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Images provided by ViiV Healthcare or sourced from ViiV Healthcare and Shutterstock’s HIV in View collection

A collage of real people experiencing good quality of life while living with HIV.