| Literature DB >> 20573285 |
Sarah C Leeper1, Brian T Montague, Jennifer F Friedman, Timothy P Flanigan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite strong global interest in family-centred HIV care models, no reviews exist that detail the current approaches to family-centred care and their impact on the health of children with HIV. A systematic review of family-centred HIV care programmes was conducted in order to describe both programme components and paediatric cohort characteristics.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20573285 PMCID: PMC2890972 DOI: 10.1186/1758-2652-13-S2-S3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Figure 1HIV/AIDS from a family perspective.
Paediatric cohort characteristics and outcomes
| Author/Date | # children on HAART | Age at initiation | Duration of follow up | CD4 at initiation | Adherence | Survival | Loss to Follow-Up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abrams 2005 [ | 144 | Median 19 months | |||||
| Van Griensven 2008 [ | 332 | Median 7.2 years | Median 2.0 years | Median 14% | 49%: >95% adherence | 98% survival at 12 months | 12 children |
| Eley 2004 [ | 80 | Median 1.25 years | "Most": >85% adherence | 7 deaths (8.8% mortality) | 4 children | ||
| Habibu 2006 [ | 52 | >95% adherence | 0 children | ||||
| Lusiama 2004 [ | 393 | Median 7.5 (years) | Median 21.9 months | Median 12% | 30 deaths (8% mortality) | 44 children | |
| Midturi 2008 [ | 56 | Mean 39.6 months | Mean 14.7 months | 77.8% adherence | 1.8% mortality | 1.8% | |
| Reddi 2007 [ | 151 | Median 5.7 years | Median 8 months | Median 7.4% | 59.6%: no missed doses | 90.9% survival at 12 months | 0 children |
| Tonwe-Gold 2009 [ | 43 | Median 12 months | 2 deaths (4.9% mortality) | 0 children | |||
| Van Winghem 2008 [ | 657 | Median 5.5 years | Median 1.36 years | 95.3% survival at 12 months | 67 children (10.2%) |
* Indicates that this refers to a conference abstract, rather than a published journal article
Note: An empty table cell indicates none of that type of data were available in that publication
Figure 2(a) MTCT-Plus paediatric cohorts. (b) MTCT-Plus male partner cohorts.
Family-centred care "wish list"
| HIV + TB care | Paediatric + adult primary care | Psychosocial/economic support | Administrative |
|---|---|---|---|
| • PMTCT | • Immunizations | • Adherence counselling for adults and children | • Follow up and patient tracking |
| • VCT, including viral diagnostic tests for early infant diagnosis | • Growth monitoring | • Psychosocial support for both HIV+ and HIV- caregivers, including substance abuse, mental health, and domestic violence education | • A tight network of referrals and linkages with community-based organizations |
| • Opportunistic infection prophylaxis | • Routine neurodevelopmental assessments | • Psychosocial support for children: social and educational activities | • Monitoring and evaluation systems |
| • HAART for adults and children | • Nutritional supplementation and infant feeding support | • Early childhood development programmes | |
| • Regular TB screening, INH prophylaxis, and treatment | • Reproductive health services, including cervical screening and STD care | • Subsidized patient transport to and from the clinic | |
| • Family planning services | • Income assistance | ||
| • Insecticide-treated bed nets, malaria screening and treatment | |||
| • Management of other endemic disease (e.g., helminths) | |||
| • Management of chronic illness: cardiovascular disease, Type II diabetes, hyperlipidemia | |||
| • Safe drinking water | |||
| • Pain management and palliative care | |||
| • Home health visits for pregnant mothers and young children |
Tolle, Richter, DeGennaro, and DeBaets [16,48,52,59]