Literature DB >> 23965029

Pathways to poor educational outcomes for HIV/AIDS-affected youth in South Africa.

Mark Orkin1, Mark E Boyes, Lucie D Cluver, Yuning Zhang.   

Abstract

A recent systematic review of studies in the developing world has critically examined linkages from familial HIV/AIDS and associated factors such as poverty and child mental health to negative child educational outcomes. In line with several recommendations in the review, the current study modelled relationships between familial HIV/AIDS, poverty, child internalising problems, gender and four educational outcomes: non-enrolment at school, non-attendance, deficits in grade progression and concentration problems. Path analyses reveal no direct associations between familial HIV/AIDS and any of the educational outcomes. Instead, HIV/AIDS-orphanhood or caregiver HIV/AIDS-sickness impacted indirectly on educational outcomes via the poverty and internalising problems that they occasioned. This has implications for evidence-based policy inferences. For instance, by addressing such intervening variables generally, rather than by seeking to target families affected by HIV/AIDS, interventions could avoid exacerbating stigmatisation, while having a more direct and stronger impact on children's educational outcomes. This analytic approach also suggests that future research should seek to identify causal paths, and may include other intervening variables related to poverty (such as child housework and caring responsibilities) or to child mental health (such as stigma and abuse), that are linked to both familial HIV/AIDS and educational outcomes.

Entities:  

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23965029     DOI: 10.1080/09540121.2013.824533

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Care        ISSN: 0954-0121


  14 in total

1.  Educational delays among children living with perinatally-acquired HIV in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Authors:  Stephanie Shiau; Stephen M Arpadi; Megan Burke; Afaaf Liberty; Cara Thurman; Faeezah Patel; Renate Strehlau; Elaine J Abrams; Ashraf Coovadia; Avy Violari; Louise Kuhn
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2019-07-09

Review 2.  Biomedical risk, psychosocial influences, and developmental outcomes: lessons from the pediatric HIV population in Africa.

Authors:  Amina Abubakar
Journal:  New Dir Child Adolesc Dev       Date:  2014

3.  HIV combination prevention and declining orphanhood among adolescents, Rakai, Uganda, 2001-18: an observational community cohort study.

Authors:  John S Santelli; Ivy S Chen; Dorean Nabukalu; Tom Lutalo; Esther J Spindler; Larry W Chang; Mary Kate Grabowski; Stephanie A Grilo; Philip Kreniske; Ying Wei; Fred Nalugoda; Susie Hoffman; Mahlet Maru; Sofia Chu; Fred M Ssewamala; William Byansi; Joseph Kagaayi; Maria J Wawer; Ronald H Gray; David Serwadda; Fred Makumbi
Journal:  Lancet HIV       Date:  2022-01       Impact factor: 16.070

4.  Orphanhood by AIDS-Related Causes and Child Mental Health: A Developmental Psychopathology Approach.

Authors:  Carla Sharp; Charles Jardin; Lochner Marais; Michael Boivin
Journal:  J HIV AIDS       Date:  2015-11-27

5.  Social support and school outcomes of adolescents orphaned and made vulnerable by HIV/AIDS living in South Western Uganda.

Authors:  Hadiza L Osuji; Proscovia Nabunya; William Byansi; Tyrone M Parchment; Fred Ssewamala; Mary M McKay; Keng-Yen Huang
Journal:  Vulnerable Child Youth Stud       Date:  2018-02-23

6.  Depression and Incident HIV in Adolescent Girls and Young Women in HIV Prevention Trials Network 068: Targets for Prevention and Mediating Factors.

Authors:  Dana E Goin; Rebecca M Pearson; Michelle G Craske; Alan Stein; Audrey Pettifor; Sheri A Lippman; Kathleen Kahn; Torsten B Neilands; Erica L Hamilton; Amanda Selin; Catherine MacPhail; Ryan G Wagner; F Xavier Gomez-Olive; Rhian Twine; James P Hughes; Yaw Agyei; Oliver Laeyendecker; Stephen Tollman; Jennifer Ahern
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  2020-05-05       Impact factor: 4.897

Review 7.  What do we know about children living with HIV-infected or AIDS-ill adults in Sub-Saharan Africa? A systematic review of the literature.

Authors:  Rachel E Goldberg; Susan E Short
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2016-03

8.  "It's because they care": understanding pathways to classroom concentration problems among HIV-affected children and youth in Western Kenya.

Authors:  Morten Skovdal
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2016-03

9.  Do not forget the boys - gender differences in children living in high HIV-affected communities in South Africa and Malawi in a longitudinal, community-based study.

Authors:  I S Hensels; L Sherr; S Skeen; A Macedo; K J Roberts; M Tomlinson
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2016-03

10.  Engaging community and governmental partners in improving health and mental health outcomes for children and adolescents impacted by HIV/AIDS in Uganda.

Authors:  Wilberforce Tumwesige; Phionah Namatovu; Ozge Sensoy Bahar; William Byansi; Mary M McKay; Fred M Ssewamala
Journal:  Pediatr Med       Date:  2021-02-28
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