47 research outputs found
Individual and Contextual Factors of Sexual Risk Behavior in Youth Perinatally Infected with HIV
Abstract This study prospectively examines the effects of maternal and child HIV infection on youth penetrative and unprotected penetrative sex, as well as the role of internal contextual, external contextual, social and self-regulatory factors in influencing the sexual behaviors of HIV?infected (PHIV+), HIV?affected (uninfected with an HIV+ caregiver), and HIV unaffected (uninfected with an HIV? caregiver) youth over time. Data (N=420) were drawn from two longitudinal studies focused on the effects of pediatric or maternal HIV on youth (51% female; 39% PHIV+) and their caregivers (92% female; 46% HIV+). PHIV+ youth were significantly less likely to engage in penetrative sex than HIV? youth at follow-up, after adjusting for contextual, social, and self-regulatory factors. Other individual- and contextual-level factors such as youth alcohol and marijuana use, residing with a biological parent, caregiver employment, caregiver marijuana use, and youth self-concept were also associated with penetrative sex. Youth who used alcohol were significantly more likely to engage in unprotected penetrative sex. Data suggest that, despite contextual, social, and self-regulatory risk factors, PHIV+ youth are less likely to engage in sexual behavior compared to HIV? youth from similar environments. Further research is required to understand delays in sexual activity in PHIV+ youth and also to understand potential factors that promote resiliency, particularly as they age into older adolescence and young adulthood.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98470/1/apc%2E2012%2E0005.pd
Multiple Measures Reveal Antiretroviral Adherence Successes and Challenges in HIV-Infected Ugandan Children
Background: Adherence to HIV antiretroviral therapy (ART) among children in developing settings is poorly understood. Methodology/Principal Findings: To understand the level, distribution, and correlates of ART adherence behavior, we prospectively determined monthly ART adherence through multiple measures and six-monthly HIV RNA levels among 121 Ugandan children aged 2â10 years for one year. Median adherence levels were 100% by three-day recall, 97.4% by 30-day visual analog scale, 97.3% by unannounced pill count/liquid formulation weights, and 96.3% by medication event monitors (MEMS). Interruptions in MEMS adherence of 48 hours were seen in 57.0% of children; 36.3% had detectable HIV RNA at one year. Only MEMS correlated significantly with HIV RNA levels (r = â0.25, p = 0.04). Multivariable regression found the following to be associated with <90% MEMS adherence: hospitalization of child (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] 3.0, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.6â5.5; p = 0.001), liquid formulation use (AOR 1.4, 95%CI 1.0â2.0; p = 0.04), and caregiverâs alcohol use (AOR 3.1, 95%CI 1.8â5.2; p<0.0001). Childâs use of co-trimoxazole (AOR 0.5, 95%CI 0.4â0.9; p = 0.009), caregiverâs use of ART (AOR 0.6, 95%CI 0.4â0.9; p = 0.03), possible caregiver depression (AOR 0.6, 95%CI 0.4â0.8; p = 0.001), and caregiver feeling ashamed of childâs HIV status (AOR 0.5, 95%CI 0.3â0.6; p<0.0001) were protective against <90% MEMS adherence. Change in drug manufacturer (AOR 4.1, 95%CI 1.5â11.5; p = 0.009) and caregiverâs alcohol use (AOR 5.5, 95%CI 2.8â10.7; p<0.0001) were associated with 48-hour interruptions by MEMS, while second-line ART (AOR 0.3, 95%CI 0.1â0.99; p = 0.049) and increasing assets (AOR 0.7, 95%CI 0.6â0.9; p = 0.0007) were protective against these interruptions. Conclusions/Significance: Adherence success depends on a well-established medication taking routine, including caregiver support and adequate education on medication changes. Caregiver-reported depression and shame may reflect fear of poor outcomes, functioning as motivation for the child to adhere. Further research is needed to better understand and build on these key influential factors for adherence intervention development
Resourcing resilience: Social protection for HIV prevention amongst children and adolescents in Eastern and Southern Africa
Adolescents are the only age group with growing AIDS-related morbidity and mortality in Eastern and Southern
Africa, making HIV prevention research among this population an urgent priority. Structural deprivations are key
drivers of adolescent HIV infection in this region. Biomedical interventions must be combined with behavioural
and social interventions to alleviate the socio-structural determinants of HIV infection. There is growing evidence
that social protection has the potential to reduce the risk of HIV infection among children and adolescents.
This research combined expert consultations with a rigorous review of academic and policy literature on the
effectiveness of social protection for HIV prevention among children and adolescents, including prevention for
those already HIV-positive. The study had three goals: (i) assess the evidence on the effectiveness of social
protection for HIV prevention, (ii) consider key challenges to implementing social protection programmes
that promote HIV prevention, and (iii) identify critical research gaps in social protection and HIV prevention, in
Eastern and Southern Africa. Causal pathways of inequality, poverty, gender and HIV risk require flexible and
responsive social protection mechanisms. Results confirmed that HIV-inclusive child- and adolescent-sensitive
social protection has the potential to interrupt risk pathways to HIV infection and foster resilience. In particular,
empirical evidence (literature and expert feedback) detailed the effectiveness of combination social protection
particularly cash/in-kind components combined with âcareâ and âcapabilityâ among children and adolescents.
Social protection programmes should be dynamic and flexible, and consider age, gender, HIV-related stigma, and
context, including cultural norms, which offer opportunities to improve programmatic coverage, reach and uptake.
Effective HIV prevention also requires integrated social protection policies, developed through strong national
government ownership and leadership. Future research should explore which combinations of social protection
work for sub-groups of children and adolescents, particularly those living with HIV
Organic Additives for the Enhancement of Laminar Flow in a BrainâVesselsâLike Microchannel Assembly
Flow enhancement which traditionally applicable in reducing the pressure drop in the core of the turbulent flow in pipes, ducts and conduits has extended its impact into medical field. A minute amount of flexible long chain polymers has been proven to be effective in enhancing and improve the blood flow which is normally in laminar regime. However, most of the investigated drag reducing additives (DRA) are artificial and carries properties including toxic and non-biodegradable thus raise the concern to be utilized in health applications. In this present work, organic polymers were extracted from okra, aloe vera and hibiscus leaves were used as DRA to enhance the laminar flow in custom-made microchannel that simulating the human brain vessels. The experiment was conducted using open-loop microfluidic system. Pressure measurements were used to evaluate the flow enhancement performance as the function of percentage of flow increment (%FI) of mucilage additives at different concentrations (100 to 1000 ppm). The results showed that the increasing of the okra mucilage concentration increased the drag reduction performance and reached to the maximum at 1000 ppm of okra solution. Both aloe vera and hibiscus mucilage showed greater drag reduction efficacy at lower additives concentration (100ppm, 300ppm and 500ppm). 14.03% of maximum flow enhancement was achieved by using 100 ppm of aloe vera mucilage at the operating pressure of 400 mbar. The results showed the potential of these organic polymers as DRA to enhance the blood flow thus could be a milestone in medical applications
Drag-reducing polymers diminish near-wall concentration of platelets in microchannel blood flow.
The accumulation of platelets near the blood vessel wall or artificial surface is an important factor in the cascade of events responsible for coagulation and/or thrombosis. In small blood vessels and flow channels this phenomenon has been attributed to the blood phase separation that creates a red blood cell (RBC)-poor layer near the wall. We hypothesized that blood soluble drag-reducing polymers (DRP), which were previously shown to lessen the near-wall RBC depletion layer in small channels, may consequently reduce the near-wall platelet excess. This study investigated the effects of DRP on the lateral distribution of platelet-sized fluorescent particles (diam. = 2 ÎŒm, 2.5 Ă 10âž/ml) in a glass square microchannel (width and depth = 100 ÎŒm). RBC suspensions in PBS were mixed with particles and driven through the microchannel at flow rates of 6-18 ml/h with and without added DRP (10 ppm of PEO, MW = 4500 kDa). Microscopic flow visualization revealed an elevated concentration of particles in the near-wall region for the control samples at all tested flow rates (between 2.4 ± 0.8 times at 6 ml/h and 3.3 ± 0.3 times at 18 ml/h). The addition of a minute concentration of DRP virtually eliminated the near-wall particle excess, effectively resulting in their even distribution across the channel, suggesting a potentially significant role of DRP in managing and mitigating thrombosis.</p