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The social and economic impact of parental HIV on children in northern Malawi: retrospective population-based cohort study

The social and economic impact of parental HIV on children in northern Malawi: retrospective population-based cohort study
The social and economic impact of parental HIV on children in northern Malawi: retrospective population-based cohort study
From population-based surveys in the 1980s in Karonga district, northern Malawi, 197 'index individuals' were identified as HIV-positive. 396 HIV-negative 'index individuals' were selected as a comparison group. These individuals, and their spouses and children, were followed up in 1998-2000. 582 of 593 index individuals were traced. 487 children of HIV-positive, and 1493 children of HIV-negative, parents were included in analyses. Rates of paternal, maternal, and double orphanhood among children with one or both parents HIV-positive were respectively 6, 8, and 17 times higher than for children with HIV-negative parents. Around 50% of children living apart from both parents had a grandparent as their guardian; for most of the rest the guardian was an aunt, uncle, or sibling. There were no child-headed households. Almost all children aged 6-14 were attending primary school. There was no evidence that parental HIV affected primary school attainment among children <15 years old. Children of HIV-positive parents were less likely to have attended secondary school than those of HIV-negative parents. The extended family has mitigated the impact of orphanhood on children, but interventions to reduce the incidence of orphanhood, and/or which strengthen society's ability to support orphans, are essential, especially as the HIV epidemic matures and its full impact is felt.
0954-0121
781-790
Floyd, S.
982a6a32-cec8-4cea-893b-e04b983c9050
Crampin, A.C.
79d516bb-98a6-4b0c-a1c2-2406f13f4649
Glynn, J.
d2178331-e207-43dc-8f39-7fa23b2e0803
Madise, N.
2ea2fbcc-50da-4696-a0a5-2fe01db63d8c
Mwenebabu, M.
fba1eda4-5e76-4b52-bed8-16cf22c7c80d
Mkhondia, S.
69dc51b8-10e3-42cc-bc6a-466b48b3443c
Ngwira, B.
596ff302-edb1-4591-a505-7c56b854acf5
Zaba, B.
e6c30ee3-64fb-4d0f-8602-599ff1e79043
Fine, P.E.M
302b7c16-5ad3-4324-b7ed-c67cc51e3b78
Floyd, S.
982a6a32-cec8-4cea-893b-e04b983c9050
Crampin, A.C.
79d516bb-98a6-4b0c-a1c2-2406f13f4649
Glynn, J.
d2178331-e207-43dc-8f39-7fa23b2e0803
Madise, N.
2ea2fbcc-50da-4696-a0a5-2fe01db63d8c
Mwenebabu, M.
fba1eda4-5e76-4b52-bed8-16cf22c7c80d
Mkhondia, S.
69dc51b8-10e3-42cc-bc6a-466b48b3443c
Ngwira, B.
596ff302-edb1-4591-a505-7c56b854acf5
Zaba, B.
e6c30ee3-64fb-4d0f-8602-599ff1e79043
Fine, P.E.M
302b7c16-5ad3-4324-b7ed-c67cc51e3b78

Floyd, S., Crampin, A.C., Glynn, J., Madise, N., Mwenebabu, M., Mkhondia, S., Ngwira, B., Zaba, B. and Fine, P.E.M (2007) The social and economic impact of parental HIV on children in northern Malawi: retrospective population-based cohort study. AIDS Care, 19 (6), 781-790. (doi:10.1080/09540120601163227).

Record type: Article

Abstract

From population-based surveys in the 1980s in Karonga district, northern Malawi, 197 'index individuals' were identified as HIV-positive. 396 HIV-negative 'index individuals' were selected as a comparison group. These individuals, and their spouses and children, were followed up in 1998-2000. 582 of 593 index individuals were traced. 487 children of HIV-positive, and 1493 children of HIV-negative, parents were included in analyses. Rates of paternal, maternal, and double orphanhood among children with one or both parents HIV-positive were respectively 6, 8, and 17 times higher than for children with HIV-negative parents. Around 50% of children living apart from both parents had a grandparent as their guardian; for most of the rest the guardian was an aunt, uncle, or sibling. There were no child-headed households. Almost all children aged 6-14 were attending primary school. There was no evidence that parental HIV affected primary school attainment among children <15 years old. Children of HIV-positive parents were less likely to have attended secondary school than those of HIV-negative parents. The extended family has mitigated the impact of orphanhood on children, but interventions to reduce the incidence of orphanhood, and/or which strengthen society's ability to support orphans, are essential, especially as the HIV epidemic matures and its full impact is felt.

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Published date: 2007

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 55077
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/55077
ISSN: 0954-0121
PURE UUID: 76eabb71-4458-4779-9fa4-1d7709c3a7c2
ORCID for N. Madise: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2813-5295

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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:52

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Contributors

Author: S. Floyd
Author: A.C. Crampin
Author: J. Glynn
Author: N. Madise ORCID iD
Author: M. Mwenebabu
Author: S. Mkhondia
Author: B. Ngwira
Author: B. Zaba
Author: P.E.M Fine

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