| Literature DB >> 23418933 |
Tamsen J Rochat1, Ntombizodumo Mkwanazi, Ruth Bland.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As access to treatment increases, large numbers of HIV-positive parents are raising HIV-negative children. Maternal HIV disclosure has been shown to have benefits for mothers and children, however, disclosure rates remain low with between 30-45% of mothers reporting HIV disclosure to their children in both observational and intervention studies. Disclosure of HIV status by parent to an HIV-uninfected child is a complex and challenging psychological and social process. No intervention studies have been designed and tested in Southern Africa to support HIV-positive parents to disclose their status, despite this region being one of the most heavily affected by the HIV epidemic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23418933 PMCID: PMC3599138 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
The Amagugu intervention detailing the six steps, purpose of the steps, materials and activities and session goals
| 1: Positive parenting | Assess mothers' readiness to disclose, offer psycho-education on disclosure steps, communicate pros and cons of disclosure, encourage an informed decision to participate and proceed with disclosure | Increase mothers’ knowledge about age-appropriate disclosure | ||
| Increase mothers' understanding of risks and benefits of disclosure | ||||
| 2: Positive families | Engage family members in a fun family process, create a sense of belonging and pride, use a strengths-based model, communicate respect for culture and values, introduce concept of play-for-communication and materials | Increase family awareness of parenting aims of the intervention | ||
| Encourage a sense of belonging among all family members | ||||
| 3: Positive life stories | Improve emotional well-being of the mother in preparation for disclosure; use ‘head, hands and heart’ model to maintain empathy and introduce concepts of emotional work; use artwork to facilitate positive experiences of love, relationships and to unpack the story of becoming HIV infected and living with HIV; dispel myths and misperceptions about HIV and offer HIV information | Mother feels supported, respected and understood by the counsellor | ||
| Mother constructs a family/parenting narrative | ||||
| Mother more emotionally contained and able to focus on the child | ||||
| Mother has confidence in her HIV specific knowledge | ||||
| 4: Positive practices | Offer specific guidance on planning and preparing the disclosure event (time, place and people) | Mother increases her understanding of what is age-appropriate and is confident to talk about HIV in a child-friendly way | ||
| Teach the 5- step process and what each step offers the child | Mother develops and practises her own talking points, has a language to use in approaching disclosure | |||
| Demonstrate the 5-step disclosure intervention and teach age-appropriate activities and games | Reduce mothers' anxiety about ‘dreaded questions’ by developing child friendly and age-appropriate answers | |||
| Through practice ensure that mother is skilled, confident, and feels enabled to undertake disclosure using the intervention tools and materials. | Mother understands child’s needs for information, activity, reassurance and comfort | |||
| Help mother develop her own child and family personalised materials | Mother is confident to proceed with disclosure | |||
| Allow for role playing, practice and development of personal talking points | ||||
| 5: Positive planning | Encourage mothers to move beyond disclosure and increase health promotion and the child’s access to a health support network and improve custody planning. Demonstrate clinic visit games and activities and encourage mother to take the child on a clinic visit, empower mother to advocate for her own and her child’s health care needs, counsel around fears and stigma | Mothers move beyond disclosure to health promotion and planning | ||
| Mother is able to advocate for her and her children’s health rights | ||||
| Mother ensures that HIV treatment is demystified and personalised for the child | ||||
| Health care environment becomes familiar | ||||
| Increase child’s participation | ||||
| Child has increased understanding of healthy sexuality | ||||
| 6: Positive futures | Reinforce play-for-communication, teach mothers basic skills for developmental play, provide positive reinforcement for emotional sharing, allows the child to participate, develop self efficacy and pride around intervention achievements | Mothers have increased understanding about how children use play to communicate | ||
| Children feel valued and rewarded for participation | ||||
Maternal HIV health and prior HIV disclosure experience
| 01 | 31 | 2003 | No | 186 | Good | HIV positive | Yes |
| 02 | 48 | 2003 | No | 500 | Very good | Don’t know | Yes |
| 03 | 30 | 2003 | No | 707 | Excellent | Don’t know | Yes |
| 04 | 31 | 2004 | No | 388 | Good | HIV positive | Yes |
| 05 | 29 | 2002 | Yes (May 2010) | 243 | Good | Don’t know | Yes |
| 06 | 31 | 2002 | No | 747 | Good | Don’t know | Yes |
| 07 | 27 | 2002 | Yes (July 2010) | 102 | Good | No partner | No partner |
| 08 | 40 | 2003 | No | 100 | Good | HIV positive | No |
| 09 | 39 | 2003 | Yes (April 2010) | 1 | Good | HIV positive | Yes |
| 10 | 32 | 2002 | No | 76 | Very good | Don’t know | Yes |
| 11 | 27 | 2003 | No | 380 | Excellent | Don’t know | No |
| 12 | 37 | 2003 | No | Don’t know | Good | Don’t know | No |
| 13 | 37 | 2003 | No | 568 | Good | Don’t know | No |
| 14 | 33 | 2004 | Yes (Nov 2005) | 509 | Good | Don’t know | No |
| 15 | 46 | 2002 | Yes (Nov 2008) | 429 | Good | HIV positive | Yes |
| 16 | 41 | 2003 | No | 325 | Good | HIV negative | Yes |
| 17 | 34 | 2002 | No | 500 | Excellent | No partner | No partner |
| 18 | 25 | 2003 | Yes (Jan 2009) | 200 | Good | HIV negative | No |
| 19 | 33 | 2004 | No | 585 | Poor | Don’t know | Yes |
| 20 | 39 | 2003 | No | 254 | Fair | HIV positive | Yes |
| 21 | 37 | 2004 | No | 361 | Good | No partner | No partner |
| 22 | 24 | 2002 | Yes (Jan 2006) | 560 | Poor | HIV positive | Yes |
| 23 | 41 | 2003 | Yes (Jan 2009) | Don’t know | Good | HIV positive | Yes |
| 24 | 34 | 2002 | Yes (May 2009) | 214 | Good | Don’t know | Yes |
Maternal disclosure to HIV-negative children
| 01 | M | 6 | No | Virus | Confused | How did you get infected; I haven't seen you go to clinic, when do you go to clinic? What do the nurses and doctors do at clinic? | I really enjoyed the questions the child asked me |
| 02 | M | 7 | No | HIV | Frightened Emotional | Will I get HIV; how can I be safe from HIV? | I enjoyed the peace that I felt after |
| 03 | F | 6 | No | HIV | Confused | What is HIV and what should you be doing at clinic about it? | I enjoyed the materials, because they are so positive about me, even when I am getting sick, I can give them love, the messages are good |
| 04 | F | 6 | No | Virus | Calm | Does a person with this virus become very slim? | I enjoyed that she seemed to understand, like she understands that a person with HIV does not have AIDS |
| 05 | F | 8 | No | Virus | Confused | How did you get the infection? When can I go to clinic? | I enjoyed that the child asked questions I could answer |
| 06 | M | 8 | No | Virus | Calm | No question | I enjoyed playing cards with the child |
| 07 | F | 7 | No | HIV | Confused | Is this what caused my dad to die?; is this why we can’t visit dad's family anymore? | I enjoyed most going through our family life line |
| 08 | M | 6 | Yes | HIV | Calm | No question | I enjoyed every moment of it and that he is the first of my children to know the truth, and I know he is going to come back and ask me about the father soon, then it will all be open |
| 09 | M | 7 | No | HIV | Confused | What is that lion doing in the house with the people in the storybook? | The joy that the storybook brought for the child is what I most enjoyed and I enjoyed being able to give a deep explanation of HIV |
| 10 | F | 8 | No | HIV | Calm | No question | I enjoyed that my child learnt that if a person is sick they will get help from the clinic |
| 11 | M | 7 | No | HIV | Calm | Are you going to die; Is HIV curable? | I enjoyed that I was the one who was able to teach him and that he understood it all |
| 12 | M | 7 | No | HIV | Calm | No question | The fact that my child understood and we had a chance to talk |
| 13 | F | 6 | No | HIV | Calm | No question | I enjoyed all the disclosure steps, they impressed me a lot |
| 14 | F | 6 | No | HIV | Calm | Why do you have to take pills always? | I enjoyed all the steps and I feel more confident to talk about my illness now |
| 15 | F | 8 | Yes | HIV | Calm | Is this what happened to my father? Did you love my father? How did you get the HIV, did you get it from my father or another man? Would my father be alive if he took medicine? | I really enjoyed everything about doing disclosure |
| 16 | M | 7 | No | Virus | Calm Frightened | No question | I enjoyed the whole thing from the beginning to the end |
| 17 | M | 8 | No | Virus | Confused | Do all viruses kill people? Are you going to die from the virus? Will I be left with no parents? | I enjoyed that my child was interested and listened to me |
| 18 | M | 7 | No | Virus | Calm | Does my niece who takes pills have this Virus also? | Telling him was important for him to know, it was exciting and I felt good, I felt at peace for no longer keeping it from him |
| 19 | M | 6 | No | Virus | Calm Confused | Do I have a virus now? Should I eat more vegetables? | I enjoyed our talk, and it brought back hope to me as I was talking to him |
| 20 | M | 6 | Yes | Virus* | Calm | What is AIDS, is it the same as a virus? Does my stepfather have it? Did my father have it before he died; Are ARVs the same as the tablets you showed me on the body map? Does AIDS ever get finished in the body? | I enjoyed and I like the fact that he was so quick to understand, he is clever |
| 21 | F | 6 | No | Virus* | Calm | What is this virus called? | I enjoyed using all the materials |
| 22 | M | 7 | No | Virus | Calm | No question | I enjoyed most that my child understood most of what we did, I wasn't expecting it |
| 23 | F | 7 | Yes | Virus | Calm Confused | No question | I enjoyed having a chance to talk about my status |
| 24 | F | 7 | Yes | Virus | Calm | No question | I enjoy the materials because of the good messages it brings to me and my children |
*In cases where mother undertook disclosure using words Virus and child’s questions led to a discussion on HIV or AIDS using those words, disclosure is listed as partial given that mother-led disclosure was initially partial.
Intervention impact on family support, health promotion, maternal confidence and child protection (Questions asked to the mother)
| The child is able to identify who can support and care for them in the family (more than in the past) | 20 | 2 | 2 |
| The family feels it is clear that they are responsible for the care of the child (more than in the past) | 21 | 0 | 3 |
| I feel more supported and cared for in my role as a parent by my family members | 22 | 0 | 2 |
| I feel less anxious about the future care of my child or children if something happens to me | 22 | 0 | 2 |
| In the last week how many times have you or your child used the body map with anybody in your family? | 7 | 11 | 6 |
| In the last week how many times have you or your child used the health promotion playing cards with anybody in your family? | 13 | 10 | 1 |
| Could you use it to teach about other health issues in the future | 21 | 2 | 1 |
| Could you use it for sex education in the future | 21 | 0 | 3 |
| Help other HIV positive mothers in your community to talk about disclosure with their children | 8 | 2 | 14 |
| Help community stakeholders understand how to talk about disclosure with their children | 9 | 0 | 15 |
| Advocate for yourself and your child’s health rights at the clinic and share what you know about disclosure | 9 | 0 | 15 |
| Risks of bullying from friends | 11 | 13 | 0 |
| Teacher-child problems | 8 | 16 | 0 |
| Physical abuse | 10 | 14 | 0 |
| Sexual abuse | 7 | 17 | 0 |
| Risks of bullying from friends | 19 | 3 | 2 |
| Teacher-child problems | 19 | 3 | 2 |
| Physical abuse | 18 | 4 | 1 |
| Sexual abuse | 14 | 8 | 2 |