Cognitive and physical development in HIV-positive children in South Africa and Malawi: A community-based follow-up comparison study.
Volume: 44
Issue: 1
Year of Publication: 2018
Abstract summary
Child development is negatively impacted by HIV with children that are infected and affected by HIV performing worse than their peers in cognitive assessments.We conducted a descriptive follow-up comparison study (n=989) in South Africa and Malawi. We tracked child development in 135 HIV-positive children compared to 854 uninfected children aged 4-13 years attending community-based organizations at baseline and again 12-15 months later.Children with HIV were more often stunted (58.8% vs. 27.4%) and underweight (18.7% vs. 7.1%). They also had significantly poorer general physical functioning (M=93.37 vs. M=97.00). HIV-positive children scored significantly lower on digit span and the draw-a-person task.These data clearly show that HIV infection poses a serious risk for child development and that there is a need for scaled up interventions. Community-based services may be ideally placed to accommodate such provision and deliver urgently needed support to these children.Study Outcome
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Statistics
Citations : Bagley C, Bolitho F, Bertrand L. Norms and construct validity of the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale in Canadian high school populations: Implications for counselling. Canadian Journal of Counselling. 1997;31(1):82–92.Authors : 5
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1111/cch.12533SSN : 1365-2214