A baseline assessment of developmental delays among children under 5 years in a high-HIV- prevalence setting in the Cape Metropole

IF 0.2 Q4 PEDIATRICS
E Chademana, U Maluleke, B Van Wyk
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 Background. More than 200 million children globally are at risk of not achieving the full developmental potential owing to multiple factors. HIV exposure is of particular concern as evidence suggests that children born to mothers who are HIV-positive are likely to experience developmental delays. Furthermore, the psychosocial and economic impacts of HIV, such as parental illness, poor mental health, poverty and malnutrition, also affect children’s development.
 Objective. To assess and address the developmental challenges faced by children aged 2 - 5 years living in high-HIV prevalence settings through a toy-based rehabilitation intervention and to analyse the prevalence and nature of developmental delays observed in these children using the Ages and Stages Questionnaires (ASQ-3).
 Methods. In response, the Bright Start programme was developed and implemented to target children living in high HIV-prevalence settings. In 2019, a pilot project was implemented with 90 caregiver-child dyads in Cape Town, South Africa. A baseline survey was conducted to assess developmental progression for all the children (N=141) in the care of the 90 caregivers using the Ages and Stages Questionnaires (ASQ-3) for children aged 24, 36, 48 and 60 months.
 Results. Findings showed that 64% of children had delays in at least one domain and 37% had multiple delays. More than half of the children had developmental delays in fine motor skills (51%), while gross-motor and problem-solving delays were reported for 30% and 26% of children, respectively. Communication and personal-social domain delays were observed in 17% and 14% of children, respectively.
 Conclusion. The prevalence of developmental delays among children in the programme was alarmingly high. These findings indicate that developmental delay is a serious concern for children living in high-HIV-prevalence settings. Early identification and timeous referrals of children with developmental delays are critical and may enable children to reach their full developmental potential.
 
 
 
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background. More than 200 million children globally are at risk of not achieving the full developmental potential owing to multiple factors. HIV exposure is of particular concern as evidence suggests that children born to mothers who are HIV-positive are likely to experience developmental delays. Furthermore, the psychosocial and economic impacts of HIV, such as parental illness, poor mental health, poverty and malnutrition, also affect children’s development. Objective. To assess and address the developmental challenges faced by children aged 2 - 5 years living in high-HIV prevalence settings through a toy-based rehabilitation intervention and to analyse the prevalence and nature of developmental delays observed in these children using the Ages and Stages Questionnaires (ASQ-3). Methods. In response, the Bright Start programme was developed and implemented to target children living in high HIV-prevalence settings. In 2019, a pilot project was implemented with 90 caregiver-child dyads in Cape Town, South Africa. A baseline survey was conducted to assess developmental progression for all the children (N=141) in the care of the 90 caregivers using the Ages and Stages Questionnaires (ASQ-3) for children aged 24, 36, 48 and 60 months. Results. Findings showed that 64% of children had delays in at least one domain and 37% had multiple delays. More than half of the children had developmental delays in fine motor skills (51%), while gross-motor and problem-solving delays were reported for 30% and 26% of children, respectively. Communication and personal-social domain delays were observed in 17% and 14% of children, respectively. Conclusion. The prevalence of developmental delays among children in the programme was alarmingly high. These findings indicate that developmental delay is a serious concern for children living in high-HIV-prevalence settings. Early identification and timeous referrals of children with developmental delays are critical and may enable children to reach their full developmental potential.
在一个高艾滋病毒流行的设置在开普敦大都会5岁以下儿童发育迟缓的基线评估
& # x0D;& # x0D;& # x0D;& # x0D;背景。由于多种因素,全球有2亿多儿童面临无法充分发挥其发展潜力的风险。艾滋病毒暴露尤其令人担忧,因为有证据表明,艾滋病毒阳性母亲所生的孩子很可能出现发育迟缓。此外,艾滋病毒的社会心理和经济影响,如父母患病、精神健康状况不佳、贫穷和营养不良,也影响儿童的发展。目标。通过基于玩具的康复干预,评估和解决生活在艾滋病毒高流行环境中的2 - 5岁儿童面临的发展挑战,并使用年龄和阶段问卷(ASQ-3)分析这些儿童中观察到的发育迟缓的患病率和性质。方法。为此,制定并实施了“光明起点”方案,目标是生活在艾滋病毒高流行环境中的儿童。2019年,我们在南非开普敦实施了一个试点项目,共有90对看护儿童。使用年龄和阶段问卷(ASQ-3)对24、36、48和60个月的儿童进行基线调查,以评估所有儿童(N=141)的发育进展。结果。调查结果显示,64%的儿童至少在一个领域有延迟,37%的儿童有多个延迟。超过一半的儿童在精细运动技能方面有发育迟缓(51%),而大运动和解决问题的迟缓分别为30%和26%的儿童。在17%和14%的儿童中分别观察到沟通和个人-社会领域延迟。结论。该方案中儿童发育迟缓的发生率高得惊人。这些发现表明,发育迟缓是生活在艾滋病毒高流行环境中的儿童的一个严重问题。发育迟缓儿童的早期识别和及时转诊至关重要,并可能使儿童充分发挥其发展潜力。& # x0D;& # x0D;& # x0D;
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CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
审稿时长
12 weeks
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