Profile of Children Suffering from HIV/AIDS in Amritsar, Punjab- A Cross-Sectional Study

Authors

  • Manisha Nagpal SGRDIMSAR
  • Sarthak Chawla KMC
  • Priyanka Devgun SGRDIMSAR
  • Harpreet Kaur SGRDIMSAR
  • Naresh Chawla District TB officer, Amritsar

Keywords:

HIV/AIDS, ARV, side effects, opportunistic infections, caregivers

Abstract

Introduction: HIV/AIDS in paediatric age group is a major cause of childhood morbidity and mortality. Mostly infection is acquired in vitro and mother-to-child transmission remains the most significant route of transmission in children <15 years. Lack of awareness about the disease and occurrence of opportunistic infec- tions are common hinderances in the successful management of disease.

Materials and methods: The study was conducted on less than 15 years children registered and being treated with Anti-retroviral therapy (ARV) registered with Government ART centre from 1st Jan 2016 to 31st December 2017. Socio-demographic profile, birth history, mode of transmission, side effects of anti-retroviral ther- apy and opportunistic infections were assessed. Data management and analysis was done by using SPSS.

Results: Of the total 46 children, 25 (54.3%) were males and 21 (45.7%) were females. Commonest mode of transmission was mother to child (91.3%). Common side-effects observed were skin rashes, nausea/vomiting, diarrhoea, fever/headache, jaundice and anaemia. Opportunistic infections observed were tuberculosis, candidiasis, recurrent diarrhoea, failure to thrive and recurrent respiratory infections.

Conclusion: On statistical analysis, it was observed that side ef- fects were significantly higher among cases from lower middle socio-economic status (p=0.015) than cases from low socio- economic status.

References

Nath A. Pediatric HIV in India: Current scenario and the way forward. Indian J Public Health 2017;61:124-30.

Children, HIV and AIDS. Available at: https://www.avert. org/professionals/HIV-social-issues/key-affected- populations/children. Assessed March 3rd 2019.

UNICEF. World AIDS Day: 1 lakh+ children, teens were liv- ing with HIV in India last year. Available at: file:///C:/Users/hp/Desktop/hivaids/World%20AIDS%20Day_%201%20lakh+%20children,%20teens%20were%20living%20with%20HIV%20in%20India%20last%20year%20-%20Edu cation%20Today%20News%20-2.html. Assessed on March 3rd 2019.

NACO. HIV facts and figures Available at: http://naco. gov.in/hiv-facts-figures Assessed on March 4th 2019.

P . Parthasarathy, S.K. Mittal, V.K. Sharma.Prevalence of Pediatric HIV in New Delhi. Indian J Pediatr 2006; 73 (3) : 205-7.

Mothi S N, Lala M M, Tappunim A R. HIV/AIDS in women and children in India. Oral Diseases 2016; 22 (Suppl. 1), 19– 24.

Mothi S N, Karpagam S, Swamy V H T, Mamatha M L, Sarvode S M. Paediatric HIV – trends and challenges.S.N. Indian J Med Res2011 Dec; 134(6): 912–9.

Pareek U, Trivedi G. Manual of socio economic scale (rural). New Delhi, Manasayan publishers; 1979.

Guha P, Sardar P (2011) Prevalence of Paediatric HIV Infec- tion in Eastern India-First report. J AIDS Clinic Res 2:127.

Avabratha K S, Kodavanji B, Vaid J. A study of psychosocial problems in families with HIV-infected children in coastal Karnataka. Genomic Medicine, Biomarkers, and Health Sci- ences 2011; 3: 72e75.

Binagwaho A, Murekatete I, Rukundo A, Mugwaneza P, Hinda R, et al. Factors associated with disclosure of HIV sta- tus among HIV positive children in Rwanda. RMJ Septem- ber 2012; Vol.69 (3): 9-15.

Thakor N, Gadhavi RN, Damor P, Baranda U, Bhagora S, Patel N. Sociodemographic profile and health status of chil- dren living with HIV–AIDS attached to an NGO (ADHAR) of Ahmedabad city. Int J Med Sci Public Health 2015;4:773- 6.

Bhattacharya M, Dubey A P, Sharma M. Patterns of Diagno- sis Disclosure and its Correlates in HIV-Infected North In- dian Children. Journal of tropical pediatrics 2011;57 (6): 405- 11.

Lodha R, Upadhyay A, Kapoor V, Kabra S K. Clinical Pro- file and Natural History of Children with HIV Infection. In- dian J Pediatr 2006; 73 (3) : 201-4.

Kumar AP, Prasad SR, Parthasarathi G, Krishna U. Assess- ment of adverse drug reactions to antiretroviral agents among HIV patients. J App Pharm Sci2018; 8(02): 79-82.

Ramaswamy S, Thandavarayan M, Thirumalaikumarasamy S, Sureshkumar A. A study on clinical profile of paediatric HIV infection in the age group of 18 months to 12 years and its correlation with CD4 count. Int J ContempPediatr 2017;4:1232-5.

Parthasarathy P, Mittal S K and Sharma V K. Prevalence of Pediatric HIV in New Delhi. Indian J Pediatr 2006; 73 (3) : 205-7.

Malleshappa K, Krishna S, Kumar S. Awareness and atti- tude of youth toward HIV/ AIDS in rural Southern India. Biomedical Research 2012; 23(2): 241-6.

Downloads

Published

2019-04-30

How to Cite

1.
Nagpal M, Chawla S, Devgun P, Kaur H, Chawla N. Profile of Children Suffering from HIV/AIDS in Amritsar, Punjab- A Cross-Sectional Study. Natl J Community Med [Internet]. 2019 Apr. 30 [cited 2024 Apr. 18];10(04):223-7. Available from: https://www.njcmindia.com/index.php/file/article/view/490

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles