Abstract

The authors conducted a case-control study of 102 children with positive HIV serology out of 956 received and screened at admission at Sainte Claire Nursery (SCN) in Lome from 1st January 2000 to 31st December 2014 with the aim of to determine the social profile, the weight evolution and the fate of these children admitted in a difficult situation. The characteristics of this study are as follows: the seroprevalence rate was 10.7%; nearly three out of four children with positive serology (76.5%) on admission had been abandoned and admitted later than those with negative serology (79% vs. 57%); orphans accounted for only 17% and 5% were children of mothers who had a psychiatric illness. Among HIV-positive children followed up to 18 months (73.5%), their serology was negative between 7 and 14 months. Nineteen (19) remained HIV positive at 18 months were HIV positive. All children with negative serology and abandoned on admission were adopted before the age of 1 year against 25% of children with positive serology. Three-quarters (75%) of adoptions in the group of HIV positive children at admission and abandoned were done in Togo vs. 40% of children with negative serology. Children with positive serology arrived late at the SCN and significantly beyond one month (43% vs. 21%, p<0.001) and they were more often abandoned. This assumes that HIV status may be one of the reasons for the abandonment of these children by parents. Until there is sufficient evidence of the place of HIV in child abandonment, HIV/AIDS awareness campaigns should take into account data from this study especially in countries with high prevalence of HIV/AIDS.

Highlights

  • HIV/AIDS, a social and humanitarian phenomenon, represents an unprecedented challenge for humanity

  • In 2007, out of the 2.7 million new cases of HIV infections worldwide in adults, SubSaharan Africa accounted for more than half of the cases (1.9 million) and 3⁄4 of the deaths in the world (1.5 million) [1]. In this region, where the average adult HIV prevalence is over 15%, two-thirds of people living with HIV (PLHIV) live, nearly 60% of who are women, compared with about 50% at the global level [1]

  • The Sainte Claire Nursery is a Christian institution created Medical aspects about sixty years ago which welcomes the greatest number of children in difficult situations in Lomé, and in Togo in general

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Summary

Introduction

HIV/AIDS, a social and humanitarian phenomenon, represents an unprecedented challenge for humanity. The Sainte Claire Nursery is a Christian institution created Medical aspects about sixty years ago which welcomes the greatest number of children in difficult situations in Lomé, and in Togo in general It has a pediatrician, a psychologist, an administrative health officer, a dozen religious nurses, a social advocate and some twenty volunteer "moms". 15% of children were admitted to the control group compared to 26% of children with positive serology, but the latter had a 5-fold increase in hospitalization Children followed are those orphaned at birth, abandoned by their mothers and brought to the institution, or those whose mothers had psychiatric illnesses, and rarely those whose mothers were incarcerated and are admitted by a court decision. Of the 19 children infected, four had died before the age of 2 years in hospital; seven had returned home at the age of 2 years according to the operating principles of the nursery and eight in temporary placement

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