| Literature DB >> 26967732 |
Lorraine Sherr1, Alexa R Yakubovich2, Sarah Skeen3,4, Lucie D Cluver2,3, Imca S Hensels1, Ana Macedo1, Mark Tomlinson4.
Abstract
Community-based responses have a lengthy history. The ravages of HIV on family functioning has included a widespread community response. Although much funding has been invested in front line community-based organisations (CBO), there was no equal investment in evaluations. This study was set up to compare children aged 9-13 years old, randomly sampled from two South African provinces, who had not received CBO support over time (YC) with a group of similarly aged children who were CBO attenders (CCC). YC baseline refusal rate was 2.5% and retention rate was 97%. CCC baseline refusal rate was 0.7% and retention rate was 86.5%. 1848 children were included-446 CBO attenders compared to 1402 9-13 year olds drawn from a random sample of high-HIV prevalence areas. Data were gathered at baseline and 12-15 months follow-up. Standardised measures recorded demographics, violence and abuse, mental health, social and educational factors. Multivariate regression analyses revealed that children attending CBOs had lower odds of experiencing weekly domestic conflict between adults in their home (OR 0.17; 95% CI 0.09, 0.32), domestic violence (OR 0.22; 95% CI 0.08, 0.62), or abuse (OR 0.11; 95% CI 0.05, 0.25) at follow-up compared to participants without CBO contact. CBO attenders had lower odds of suicidal ideation (OR 0.41; 95% CI 0.18, 0.91), fewer depressive symptoms (B = -0.40; 95% CI -0.62, -0.17), less perceived stigma (B = -0.37; 95% CI -0.57, -0.18), fewer peer problems (B = -1.08; 95% CI -1.29, -0.86) and fewer conduct problems (B = -0.77; 95% CI -0.95, -0.60) at follow-up. In addition, CBO contact was associated with more prosocial behaviours at follow-up (B = 1.40; 95% CI 1.13, 1.67). No associations were observed between CBO contact and parental praise or post-traumatic symptoms. These results suggest that CBO exposure is associated with behavioural and mental health benefits for children over time. More severe psychopathology was not affected by attendance and may need more specialised input.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26967732 PMCID: PMC4788449 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0151305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline comparison between participants who were lost to and retained at follow-up.
| Total, N = 1848 | Lost to follow-up | Retained at follow-up | χ2 or | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1011 (54.7%) | 54 (50.5%) | 28 (44.4%) | 26 (59.1%) | 957 (55.0%) | 197 (51.4%) | 760 (56.0%) | 0.824 (.364) | |
| 10.89 (1.3) | 11.68 (1.1) | 10.95 (1.3) | 11.62 (1.1) | |||||
| 12 (0.6%) | 1 (0.9%) | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (2.3%) | 11 (0.6%) | 3 (0.8%) | 8 (0.6%) | 0.143 (.705) | |
| 5.3 (1.5) | 5.21 (1.6) | 4.97 (1.6) | 5.55 (1.6) | 5.33 (1.5) | 5.03 (1.5) | 5.42 (1.5) | 0.856 (.392) | |
| 485 (26.2%) | 32 (29.9%) | 14 (22.2%) | 18 (40.9%) | 453 (26.0%) | 46 (12.0%) | 407 (30.0%) | 0.787 (.375) | |
| 42.3 (12.5) | 41.96 (15.4) | 41.30 (16.4) | 42.91 (13.79) | 42.30 (12.3) | 46.52 (15.1) | 41.11 (11.0) | 0.224 (.823) | |
| 27 (42.9%) | 30 (68.2%) | 159 (41.5%) | 1018 (75.0%) | |||||
| 1318 (71.4%) | 68 (63.6%) | 36 (57.1%) | 32 (72.7%) | 1250 (71.8%) | 213 (55.6%) | 1037 (76.4%) | 3.388 (.066) | |
| 34 (54.8%) | 10 (22.7%) | 235 (62.5%) | 285 (21.0%) | |||||
| 19 (30.2%) | 28 (63.6%) | 95 (24.8%) | 844 (62.2%) | |||||
| 379 (20.5%) | 19 (17.8%) | 10 (15.9%) | 9 (20.5%) | 360 (20.7%) | 57 (14.9%) | 303 (22.3%) | 0.527 (.468) | |
| 0 (0.0%) | 3 (6.8%) | 10 (2.6%) | 129 (9.5%) | |||||
| 97 (5.2%) | 5 (4.7%) | 1 (1.6%) | 4 (9.1%)) | 92 (5.3%) | 1 (0.3%) | 91 (6.7%) | 0.076 (.783) | |
| 1289 (69.8%) | 83 (77.6%) | 57 (90.5%) | 26 (59.1%) | 1206 (69.3%) | 298 (77.8%) | 908 (66.9%) | 3.291 (.070) | |
| 162 (8.8%) | 13 (12.1%) | 10 (15.9%) | 3 (6.9%) | 149 (8.6%) | 43 (11.3%) | 106 (7.8%) | 1.620 (.203) | |
| 27 (42.9%) | 0 (0.0%) | 163 (42.7%) | 468 (34.5%) | |||||
| 1.10 (1.8) | 1.41 (2.1) | 1.19 (1.8) | 1.73 (2.4) | 1.09 (1.8) | 0.77 (1.2) | 1.17 (1.9) | 1.832 (.067) | |
| 71 (3.8%) | 3 (2.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | 3 (6.8%) | 68 (3.9%) | 14 (3.6%) | 54 (4.0%) | 0.331 (.565) | |
| 32 (50.8%) | 7 (15.9%) | 179 (46.7%) | 259 (19.1%) | |||||
| 537 (29.1%) | 35 (32.7%) | 24 (38.1%) | 11 (25.0%) | 502 (28.9%) | 144 (37.6%) | 358 (26.4%) | 0.715 (.398) | |
| 3 (4.8%) | 14 (31.8%) | 20 (5.2%) | 423 (31.3%) | |||||
| 79 (4.3%) | 5 (4.7%) | 2 (3.2%) | 3 (6.8%) | 74 (4.3%) | 1 (0.3%) | 73 (5.4%) | 0.043 (.835) | |
Note. Data are mean (SD) or N (%). Difference statistic is chi-square for categorical variables and t-score for continuous variables. The difference statistic shows the difference between total retained for follow-up and total lost to follow-up per variable across both studies; statistically significant differences are bolded. Asterisks denote differences between retained at and lost to follow-up separately for both studies (YC and CCC).
* p < .05
** p < .01
*** p < .001.
Differences on socio-demographic variables between participants with and without CBO contact at follow-up.
| With CBO contactN = 446 | Without CBO contact N = 1402 | χ2 (p-value) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 (1.9%) | 22 (1.6%) | 0.13 (.715) | |
| 34 (9.2%) | 123 (9.1%) | 0.00 (.952) | |
| 304 (79.4%) | 1047 (77.2%) | 0.81 (.370) | |
Note. Data are N (%) and difference statistic is chi-square. Statistically significant differences are bolded.
Longitudinal associations between CBO contact and binary outcomes.
| Outcome variable | Odds Ratio (95% CI) | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| 1.062 (0.802–1.406) | .676 | |
Note. Analyses are multiple logistic regression analyses, conducted separately for each outcome variable at follow-up. For all analyses, the predictor variable was CBO contact and the covariates were gender, age, cumulative deprivation, and the outcome variable at baseline. Cumulative deprivation was a summed score of the following: orphanhood, HIV-positive carer, HIV-positive child, child cares for other children, child cares for sick people, child has seen someone being attacked, and child lives in an overcrowded household. Statistically significant differences are bolded.
Longitudinal associations between CBO contact and continuous outcomes.
| Outcome variable | B (unstandardized) coefficient (95% CI) | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| -0.010 (-0.135, 0.114) | .874 | |
Note. Analyses are multiple linear regression analyses, conducted separately for each outcome variable at follow-up. For all analyses, the predictor variable was CBO contact and the covariates were gender, age, cumulative deprivation, and the outcome variable at baseline, except where otherwise noted. Cumulative deprivation was a summed score of the following: orphanhood, HIV-positive carer, HIV-positive child, child cares for other children, child cares for sick people, child has seen someone being attacked, and child lives in an overcrowded household. Statistically significant differences are bolded.
a These analyses did not control for the outcome variable at Time 1, as these variables were only measured in both studies at follow-up.