Background
In
sub-Saharan Africa many children live in extreme poverty and experience a
burden of illness and disease that is disproportionately high. The emergence of
HIV and AIDS has only exacerbated long-standing challenges to improving
children’s health in the region, with recent cohorts experiencing pediatric
AIDS and high levels of orphan status, situations which are monitored globally
and receive much policy and research attention. Children’s health, however, can
be affected also by living with HIV-infected adults, through associated
exposure to infectious diseases and the diversion of household resources away
from them. While long recognized, far less research has focused on
characterizing this distinct and vulnerable population of HIV-affected
children.
Methods
Using
Demographic and Health Survey data from 23 countries collected between 2003 and
2011, we estimate the percentage of children living in a household with at
least one HIV-infected adult. We assess overlaps with orphan status and
investigate the relationship between children and the adults who are infected
in their households.
Results
The
population of children living in a household with at least one HIV-infected
adult is substantial where HIV prevalence is high; in Southern Africa, the
percentage exceeded 10% in all countries and reached as high as 36%. This
population is largely distinct from the orphan population. Among children
living in households with tested, HIV-infected adults, most live with parents,
often mothers, who are infected; nonetheless, in most countries over 20% live
in households with at least one infected adult who is not a parent.
Conclusion
Until new infections contract significantly, improvements
in HIV/AIDS treatment suggest that the population of children living with
HIV-infected adults will remain substantial. It is vital to on-going efforts to
reduce childhood morbidity and mortality to consider whether current care and
outreach sufficiently address the distinct vulnerabilities of these children.
Below: Co-residence of Children 0–17 with HIV-infected
Adults and Adult HIV Prevalence (15–49), by Country
Below: Among Children 0–17 Living with at Least One HIV-infected Adult, Percent Living with HIV-infected Mothers, Fathers, and Others, by Country
Full article at: http://goo.gl/IAtHln
By:
Susan E. Short
Department of Sociology and
Population Studies and Training Center, Brown University, Providence, RI,
United States of America
Rachel E. Goldberg
Department of Sociology,
University of California Irvine, Irvine, CA, United States of America
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
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