AI Article Synopsis

  • Children HIV-exposed, uninfected (CHEU) may face developmental challenges, especially in attention-related skills, but this hasn't been extensively studied compared to their HIV-unexposed counterparts (CHUU).
  • A study involving 55 CHEU and 51 CHUU children at 5.5 years old examined attention issues and developmental outcomes, revealing that very few in either group showed signs of probable ADHD, and no significant differences in attention-related measures were found.
  • However, CHEU scored lower on intelligence, visuomotor skills, and academic abilities compared to CHUU, suggesting that while they aren't at a higher risk for attention difficulties, sociodemographic factors like maternal employment could influence their behavioral and neurodevelopmental

Article Abstract

Children HIV-exposed, uninfected (CHEU) are at risk for compromised developmental outcomes. Attention is important for behavioural, cognitive and academic skills, yet has not been thoroughly investigated compared to children HIV-unexposed uninfected (CHUU). Fifty-five CHEU and 51 CHUU children were recruited at 5.5 years of age. Measures of inattention (IA), hyperactivity/impulsivity (HI) and total scores were collected using the parent-reported ADHD-Rating-Scale-IV. Measures of intelligence, visuomotor skills, academics and adaptive functioning were obtained. Analyses of between-group differences were performed as were correlational and multiple regression models, accounting for maternal education, employment and delivery type. Few children met clinical cut-offs for probable ADHD (3.6% CHEU, 2.0% CHUU), and no group differences in measures of IA, HI and combined scores were found. CHEU scored significantly lower than CHUU on intelligence, visuomotor function, academic skills and aspects of adaptive behaviour, though within age expectations. Lower Full-Scale IQ and Processing Speed were associated with higher IA in CHEU and lower adaptive functioning with higher IA in CHUU. Across both groups, children of unemployed mothers had more HI symptoms. CHEU were not at increased risk for attention difficulties at 5.5 years of age. Maternal employment status highlights the contribution of sociodemographic factors in shaping behaviour and neurodevelopment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09540121.2023.2240069DOI Listing

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