| Literature DB >> 26870614 |
Grace Gachanja1, Gary J Burkholder2.
Abstract
HIV prevalence in Kenya remains steady at 5.6% for adults 15 years and older, and 0.9% among children aged below 14 years. Parents and children are known to practice unprotected sex, which has implications for continued HIV spread within the country. Additionally, due to increased accessibility of antiretroviral therapy, more HIV-positive persons are living longer. Therefore, the need for HIV disclosure of a parent's and/or a child's HIV status within the country will continue for years to come. We conducted a qualitative phenomenological study to understand the entire process of disclosure from the time of initial HIV diagnosis of an index person within an HIV-affected family, to the time of full disclosure of a parent's and/or a child's HIV status to one or more HIV-positive, negative, or untested children within these households. Participants were purposively selected and included 16 HIV-positive parents, seven HIV-positive children, six healthcare professionals (physician, clinical officer, psychologist, registered nurse, social worker, and a peer educator), and five HIV-negative children. All participants underwent an in-depth individualized semistructured interview that was digitally recorded. Interviews were transcribed and analyzed in NVivo 8 using the modified Van Kaam method. Six themes emerged from the data indicating that factors such as HIV testing, living with HIV, evolution of disclosure, questions, emotions, benefits, and consequences of disclosure interact with each other and either impede or facilitate the HIV disclosure process. Kenya currently does not have guidelines for HIV disclosure of a parent's and/or a child's HIV status. HIV disclosure is a process that may result in poor outcomes in both parents and children. Therefore, understanding how these factors affect the disclosure process is key to achieving optimal disclosure outcomes in both parents and children. To this end, we propose an HIV disclosure model incorporating these six themes that is geared at helping healthcare professionals provide routine, clinic-based, targeted, disclosure-related counseling/advice and services to HIV-positive parents and their HIV-positive, HIV-negative, and untested children during the HIV disclosure process. The model should help improve HIV disclosure levels within HIV-affected households. Future researchers should test the utility and viability of our HIV disclosure model in different settings and cultures.Entities:
Keywords: Child HIV status disclosure; HIV disclosure; HIV disclosure guidelines; HIV disclosure model; HIV/AIDS; Kenya; Parental HIV status disclosure; Resource poor nation; Sub-Saharan Africa
Year: 2016 PMID: 26870614 PMCID: PMC4748695 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1HIV disclosure themes.
Participants’ demographic profiles.
| Variable | Frequency | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV-positive children | HIV-negative children | HIV-positive parents | Healthcare professionals | |
| 12–13 | 2 | 1 | ||
| 14–15 | 1 | 3 | ||
| 16–17 | 4 | 1 | ||
| 21–30 | 1 | |||
| 31–40 | 8 | 2 | ||
| 41–50 | 7 | 3 | ||
| 51–60 | 1 | |||
| Female | 3 | 3 | 11 | 4 |
| Male | 4 | 2 | 5 | 2 |
| Primary | 2 | 3 | 2 | |
| Secondary | 5 | 2 | 7 | |
| College | 7 | 6 | ||
| Single | 1 | 2 | ||
| Divorced | 1 | |||
| Widowed | 4 | |||
| Married | 10 | 4 | ||
HIV-positive children’s, HIV-negative children’s, and HIV-positive parents’ family members testing and HIV statuses.
| Participant | HIV-positive children | HIV-negative children | HIV-positive parents |
|---|---|---|---|
| Family A | Parent: single HIV-positive mother Siblings: 5 HIV-negative | Parents: 1 deceased, 1 HIV-positive Siblings: 3 untested, 1 HIV-negative | Spouse deceased and HIV-positive Children: 1 HIV-positive, 1 died at 6 months untested |
| Family B | Parents: 1 deceased, 1 HIV-positive No siblings | Parents: 1 untested, 1 HIV-positive Siblings: 1 untested | Spouse HIV-positive Children: 1 HIV-negative |
| Family C | Parent: single HIV-positive mother Siblings: 5 HIV-negative | Parents: 1 deceased, 1 HIV-positive Siblings: 3 untested, 1 HIV-negative | Single HIV-positive mother Children: 1 HIV-positive |
| Family D | Parents: 1 deceased, 1 HIV-positive Siblings: 2 untested | Parent: single HIV-positive mother Siblings: 1 HIV-negative | Spouse untested Children: 2 HIV-positive, 1 HIV-negative |
| Family E | Parents: 1 deceased, 1 HIV-positive Siblings: 1 HIV-negative, 1 deceased | Parents: 1 deceased, 1 HIV-positive Siblings: 2 untested | Spouse HIV-positive Children: 2 HIV-positive, 1 HIV-negative |
| Family F | Parents: 1 deceased, 1 HIV-positive Siblings: 1 untested | Spouse deceased and untested Children: 1 HIV-positive, 1 HIV-negative | |
| Family G | Parent: single HIV-positive mother No siblings | Spouse HIV-negative Children: 1 HIV-positive, 1 untested | |
| Family H | Spouse deceased and untested Children: 1 HIV-negative, 1 HIV-positive, 2 untested | ||
| Family I | Spouse HIV-positive Children: 2 HIV-positive | ||
| Family J | Spouse HIV-positive Children: 1 HIV-positive, 1 HIV-negative | ||
| Family K | Spouse HIV-positive Children: 2 untested | ||
| Family L (married couple) | Married HIV-positive couple Children: 2 HIV-negative, 3 untested | ||
| Family M | Spouse HIV-positive Children: 1 HIV-negative, 1 untested | ||
| Family N | Spouse HIV-positive Children: 2 HIV-positive, 3 HIV-negative, 1 stillbirth | ||
| Family O | Spouse deceased and untested Children: 1 HIV-positive, 1 untested |
Figure 2HIV disclosure model.