| Literature DB >> 25186784 |
Consuelo Beck-Sagué1, Maria Claudia Pinzón-Iregui, Rosa Abreu-Pérez, Leonel Lerebours-Nadal, Christi M Navarro, Gladys Ibanez, Solange Soto, Mina Halpern, Stephen W Nicholas, Robert Malow, Jessy G Dévieux.
Abstract
A mixed-methods study was conducted to determine the proportion of HIV-infected children who knew their status, identify characteristics associated with children's knowledge of their status, and describe caregivers' and adolescents' experiences relevant to disclosure in the Dominican Republic (DR). Of 327 patients aged 6-18 years treated in the principal DR pediatric HIV facilities, 74 (22.6 %) knew their status. Patients aged 13 years or older and/or who had participated in non-clinical activities for HIV-infected children were more likely to know their status. Caregivers who had disclosed cited healthcare providers' advice, children's desire to know and concerns that children might initiate sexual activity before knowing or discover their status by accidental or malicious disclosure. Non-disclosing caregivers worried that children would be traumatized by disclosure and/or stigmatized if they revealed it to others. Adolescents supported disclosure by 10-12 years of age, considered withholding of children's HIV diagnosis ill-advised, and recommended a disclosure process focused initially on promoting non-stigmatizing attitudes about HIV.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25186784 PMCID: PMC4344397 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-014-0888-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165