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Multicenter Study
. 2010 Feb-Mar;31(2):116-28.
doi: 10.1097/DBP.0b013e3181cdaa20.

Co-occuring psychiatric symptoms in children perinatally infected with HIV and peer comparison sample

Affiliations
Multicenter Study

Co-occuring psychiatric symptoms in children perinatally infected with HIV and peer comparison sample

Kenneth D Gadow et al. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2010 Feb-Mar.

Abstract

Objective: To compare the rates of psychopathology in youths perinatally infected with HIV (N = 319) with a comparison sample of peers (N = 256) either HIV-exposed or living in households with HIV-infected family members.

Method: Participants were randomly recruited from 29 sites in the United States and Puerto Rico and completed an extensive battery of measures including standardized DSM-IV-referenced ratings scales.

Results: The HIV+ group was relatively healthy (73% with CD4% >25%), and 92% were actively receiving antiretroviral therapy. Youths with HIV (17%) met symptom and impairment criteria for the following disorders: attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (12%), oppositional defiant disorder (5%), conduct disorder (1%), generalized anxiety disorder (2%), separation anxiety disorder (1%), depressive disorder (2%), or manic episode (1%). Many youths with HIV (27%) and peers (26%) were rated (either self- or caregiver report) as having psychiatric problems that interfered with academic or social functioning. With the exception of somatization disorder, the HIV+ group did not evidence higher rates or severity of psychopathology than peers, although rates for both groups were higher than the general population. Nevertheless, self-awareness of HIV infection in younger children was associated with more severe symptomatology, and youths with HIV had higher lifetime rates of special education (44 vs 32%), psychopharmacological (23 vs 12%), or behavioral (27 vs 17%) interventions. Youth-caregiver agreement was modest, and youths reported more impairment.

Conclusion: HIV infection was not associated with differentially greater levels of current psychopathology; nevertheless, investigation of relations with developmental changes and specific illness parameters and treatments are ongoing.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Caregiver-rated symptoms in younger children (<12 years) aware and unaware of their HIV status: analyses adjusted for gender, caregiver education, caregiver-reported symptoms, life stressors, and caregiver relationship to youth. ODD, oppositional defiant disorder.

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