Goldberg Rachel E, Short Susan E
a Department of Sociology , University of California Irvine , Irvine , CA , USA.
b Department of Sociology and Population Studies and Training Center , Brown University , Providence , RI , USA.
AIDS Care. 2016 Mar;28 Suppl 2(sup2):130-41. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2016.1176684.
Millions of children in Sub-Saharan Africa live with adults, often parents, who are HIV-infected or ill due to AIDS. These children experience social, emotional, and health vulnerabilities that overlap with, but are not necessarily the same as, those of orphans or other vulnerable children. Despite their distinctive vulnerabilities, research aimed at understanding the situation of these children has been limited until very recently. This review summarizes the state of knowledge based on a systematic search of PubMed and Web of Science that identified 47 empirical research articles that examined either the population prevalence of children living with HIV-infected or AIDS-sick adults, or the consequences of adult HIV infection or AIDS illness for child well-being. This review confirms that this population of children is substantial in size, and that the vulnerabilities they experience are multi-faceted, spanning physical and emotional health and schooling. Mechanisms were examined empirically in only a small number of studies, but encompass poverty, transmission of opportunistic infections, care for unwell adults, adult distress, AIDS stigma, lack of social support, maternal breastfeeding issues, and vertical HIV transmission. Some evidence is provided that infants, adolescents, children with infected or ill mothers, and children living with severely ill adults are particularly vulnerable. Future research would benefit from more attention to causal inference and further characterization of processes and circumstances related to vulnerability and resilience. It would also benefit from further study of variation in observed associations between adult HIV/AIDS and child well-being based on characteristics such as age, sex, kinship, severity of illness, TB co-infection, disclosure, and serostatus awareness. Almost one-quarter of the studies reviewed did not investigate variation based on any of these factors. More nuanced understanding of the short- and long-term effects of adult HIV on children's needs and circumstances will be important to ongoing discussions about equity in policies and interventions.
撒哈拉以南非洲地区有数百万儿童与受艾滋病毒感染或因艾滋病患病的成年人(通常是父母)生活在一起。这些儿童面临的社会、情感和健康方面的脆弱性与孤儿或其他弱势儿童的脆弱性有重叠,但不一定相同。尽管他们有独特的脆弱性,但直到最近,旨在了解这些儿童状况的研究一直很有限。本综述基于对PubMed和科学网的系统检索总结了相关知识状况,检索确定了47篇实证研究文章,这些文章要么研究了与受艾滋病毒感染或患艾滋病的成年人生活在一起的儿童的总体患病率,要么研究了成人艾滋病毒感染或艾滋病疾病对儿童福祉的影响。本综述证实,这类儿童数量众多,他们面临的脆弱性是多方面的,涵盖身心健康和教育。在少数研究中对相关机制进行了实证研究,包括贫困、机会性感染的传播、照顾患病成年人、成人痛苦、艾滋病污名、缺乏社会支持、母亲母乳喂养问题以及艾滋病毒垂直传播。有证据表明,婴儿、青少年、母亲受感染或患病的儿童以及与重病成年人生活在一起的儿童特别脆弱。未来的研究若能更多关注因果推断以及对与脆弱性和复原力相关的过程和情况进行进一步描述,将会有所助益。基于年龄、性别、亲属关系、疾病严重程度、结核病合并感染、信息披露和血清学状态知晓等特征,进一步研究成人艾滋病毒/艾滋病与儿童福祉之间观察到的关联差异也会有所帮助。所审查的研究中近四分之一未基于任何这些因素调查差异。更细致入微地了解成人艾滋病毒对儿童需求和情况的短期和长期影响,对于当前有关政策和干预措施公平性的讨论至关重要。