Psychosocial Correlates and Coping Strategies Associated With Long-Term Survival of HIV-Infected Children
NCT ID: NCT00001435
Last Updated: 2008-03-04
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
110 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
1995-04-30
2000-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Studies of children with chronic illnesses report that adaptive coping strategies such as maintaining a hopeful attitude, social support and information seeking may affect psychological adjustment and help to buffer the negative psychological effects that a chronic illness may have. HIV-infected children not only have the added stress of living with debilitating and progressive symptoms in a disease that threatens their life spans, but their disease often stigmatizes them and causes them to be ostracized. The largest proportion of children with HIV disease acquired it perinatally, and therefore the mother is also infected. Thus it is expected that these families have at least two infected natural family members, causing multigenerational effect in terms of epidemiology, multiple separations and the death of close family members. As a result, children need to develop coping strategies in order to deal effectively with this disease.
Preliminary results from a longitudinal study assessing psychiatric disturbances in HIV-infected, school-aged children indicate that these children exhibit elevated levels of separation anxiety, depression and overanxious disorder. Whether similar results will be found in older HIV-infected children is not yet known. Research that can identify the coping resources, such as social support, family communication styles, hopefulness and quality of life, that 1) buffer the negative effects of stress on the mental health of HIV-infected children and 2) identify areas of vulnerability, would be important in our attempts to design early mental health interventions.
The HIV-infected child's perceived social support, self-esteem, psychological adjustment, and adaptive coping will be based on self-reports from the child. The caretakers will also give ratings of the child's adjustment in addition to providing information on how they feel their child has changed in the past year. Caretakers will complete measures regarding family environment, their own adjustment, and demographic variables. The child's health care provider will complete a questionnaire assessing his/her current health status. The effects of age and disease progression in both the child and parent will be taken into account for the final analysis of this study.
Conditions
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Cancer Institute (NCI)
NIH
Locations
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National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Countries
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References
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Bose S, Moss HA, Brouwers P, Pizzo P, Lorion R. Psychologic adjustment of human immunodeficiency virus-infected school-age children. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 1994 Jun;15(3 Suppl):S26-33.
Havens JF, Whitaker AH, Feldman JF, Ehrhardt AA. Psychiatric morbidity in school-age children with congenital human immunodeficiency virus infection: a pilot study. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 1994 Jun;15(3 Suppl):S18-25.
Wiener L, Theut S, Steinberg SM, Riekert KA, Pizzo PA. The HIV-infected child: parental responses and psychosocial implications. Am J Orthopsychiatry. 1994 Jul;64(3):485-92. doi: 10.1037/h0079539.
Other Identifiers
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95-C-0112
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: secondary_id
950112
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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