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  1. Psychological Distress in Orphan, Vulnerable Children and Non-Vulnerable Children in High Prevalence HIV/AIDS Communities

    Psychological Distress in Orphan, Vulnerable Children and Non-Vulnerable Children in High Prevalence HIV/AIDS Communities

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Journal of Psychology in Africa • Authors: Bev Killian --- University of KwaZulu-Natal, Kevin Durrheim --- University of KwaZulu-Natal,
    The degree of psychological distress and access social support is investigated in children (n = 741) living in nine high prevalence HIV/AIDS communities. They comprised (i) vulnerable, maternally-orphaned (n = 319); (ii) vulnerable and not orphaned (n = 276); and...
  2. “It can save you if you just forget”: Closeness and Competence as Conditions for Coping among Ugandan Orphans

    “It can save you if you just forget”: Closeness and Competence as Conditions for Coping among Ugandan Orphans

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Journal of Psychology in Africa • Authors: Krister Westlye Fjermestad --- University of Bergen, Norway Ingrid Kvestad --- National Child Protection Services, Norway Marguerite Daniel --- University of Bergen, Norway Gro Th. Lie --- University of Bergen, Norway
    This article explores the coping strategies of orphaned children and their caregivers supported by a community-based organization in a Ugandan slum area. In-depth qualitative interviews were conducted with eight orphans (aged 12 to 16 years) and their caregivers selected by...
  3. Breaking the silence: using memory books as a counselling and succession-planning tool with AIDS-affected households in Uganda

    Breaking the silence: using memory books as a counselling and succession-planning tool with AIDS-affected households in Uganda

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Sophie Witter Beatrice Were
    This article reviews the experience of NACWOLA and Save the Children (UK) in using 'memory books' in AIDS-affected households in Uganda from the mid-1990s to the present. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with key stakeholders in early 2004, including NACWOLA...
  4. Developmental vulnerabilities and strengths of children living in child-headed households: a comparison with children in adult-headed households in equivalent impoverished communities

    Developmental vulnerabilities and strengths of children living in child-headed households: a comparison with children in adult-headed households in equivalent impoverished communities

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: David Donald Glynis Clacherty
    This pilot study addresses the need to clarify specific developmental vulnerabilities and strengths that characterise children living in child-headed households in comparison to children living in adult-headed households in equivalent impoverished communities. Samples of 10 each of these two categories...
  5. HIV/AIDS, childhood and governance: sundering the bonds of human society

    HIV/AIDS, childhood and governance: sundering the bonds of human society

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Tony Barnett
    There is a disharmonious resonance between the length of HIV infection in the individual human host and the length of a human generation. In brief, an infected person may have children, these may be orphaned and grow up to become...
  6. 'But where are our moral heroes?' An analysis of South African press reporting on children affected by HIV/AIDS

    'But where are our moral heroes?' An analysis of South African press reporting on children affected by HIV/AIDS

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Helen Meintjes Rachel Bray
    Messages conveyed both explicitly and implicitly in the media play an important role in shaping the public's understanding of issues, as well as in shaping associated policy, programmes and popular responses to these issues. This paper applies discourse analysis to...
  7. What do Tanzanian children worry about?

    What do Tanzanian children worry about?

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Mai Bente Snipstad Gro Therese Lie Dagfinn Winje
    This paper explores the worries of children in a sample of 8- to 15-year-old children, drawn from three primary schools on the outskirts of Moshi, Tanzania. Data about children's worries were collected by two methods. First, lists of worries were...
  8. Beyond liminality: orphanhood and marginalisation in Botswana

    Beyond liminality: orphanhood and marginalisation in Botswana

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Marguerite Daniel
    For children, the death of a parent initiates a rite of passage, a three-stage process: separation from their status as 'son' or 'daughter', a period of liminality with rituals of mourning, burial and interment, and finally re-aggregation into a re-formed...
  9. The children left to stand alone

    The children left to stand alone

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Sidsel Roalkvam
    Drawing upon ethnographic fieldwork in Seke, a semi-rural area outside Harare, Zimbabwe, this paper explores the social mechanism behind the seeming invisibility of children left on their own and how this form of 'invisibility' challenges established notions of childhood, parenthood,...
  10. Young Malawians on the interaction between mental health and HIV/AIDS

    Young Malawians on the interaction between mental health and HIV/AIDS

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Jerome Wright Fred Lubben Mac Bain Mkandawire
    Previous research has identified high levels of mental health problems among people affected by HIV. This study surveys specifically adolescents in southern Malawi on their experience of the impacts of living with HIV or AIDS on one's mental health. At...
  11. Positive care? HIV and residential care for children in South Africa

    Positive care? HIV and residential care for children in South Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Susan Moses --- , South Africa Helen Meintjes --- , South Africa
    Responses to the HIV epidemic leading to an increase in the number of residential care facilities for children across sub-Saharan Africa have prompted concerns that large numbers of orphaned children are being placed in institutional care. There is little empirical...
  12. Resilience through participation and coping-enabling social environments: the case of HIV-affected children in sub-Saharan Africa

    Resilience through participation and coping-enabling social environments: the case of HIV-affected children in sub-Saharan Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Morten Skovdal --- Department of Health Promotion and Development, Norway Marguerite Daniel --- Department of Health Promotion and Development, Norway
    Many children and youths living in low-resource and high-HIV-prevalence communities in sub-Saharan Africa are presented with daily hardships that few of us can even imagine. It is therefore no surprise that most research reporting on the experiences of HIV-affected children...
  13. Safeguarding inheritance and enhancing the resilience of orphaned young people living in child- and youth-headed households in Tanzania and Uganda

    Safeguarding inheritance and enhancing the resilience of orphaned young people living in child- and youth-headed households in Tanzania and Uganda

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Ruth Evans --- Department of Geography and Environmental Science, United Kingdom
    This article explores the resilience of orphaned young people in safeguarding physical assets (land and property) inherited from their parents and sustaining their households without a co-resident adult relative. Drawing on the concept of resilience and the sustainable livelihoods framework,...
  14. Challenges and coping strategies of orphaned children in Tanzania who are not adequately cared for by adults

    Challenges and coping strategies of orphaned children in Tanzania who are not adequately cared for by adults

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Marguerite Daniel --- Department of Health Promotion and Development, Norway Angela Mathias --- Department of Health Promotion and Development, Norway
    Orphaned children in poor rural communities sometimes have no adult who is able to care for them or else the adult caregiver is not able to provide adequate care. Tanzania remains one of the poorest countries in the world, and...
  15. The use of rites of passage in strengthening the psychosocial wellbeing of orphaned children in Botswana

    The use of rites of passage in strengthening the psychosocial wellbeing of orphaned children in Botswana

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Masego Thamuku --- Department of Health Promotion and Development, Norway Marguerite Daniel --- Department of Health Promotion and Development, Norway
    Children who have been bereaved in the context of AIDS may experience many challenges to their psychosocial wellbeing. Programmes to help orphaned children are usually anchored in child rights. As the individual focus of rights-based approaches is inept in African...
  16. Questioning the use-value of social relationships: care and support of youths affected by HIV in child-headed households in Port Elizabeth, South Africa

    Questioning the use-value of social relationships: care and support of youths affected by HIV in child-headed households in Port Elizabeth, South Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Diana Van Dijk --- Centre for International Development Issues Nijmegen (CIDIN), The Netherlands Francien Van Driel --- Centre for International Development Issues Nijmegen (CIDIN), The Netherlands
    The opinion that the extended family can fulfil its supportive role in assisting child-headed households continues to exist. How these households encounter support, what this support entails, and how they experience this support is an under-researched subject. Most research literature...
  17. The impact of the declining extended family support system on the education of orphans in Lesotho

    The impact of the declining extended family support system on the education of orphans in Lesotho

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Pius T Tanga --- Department of Social Work/Social Development, South Africa
    This paper examines the impact of the weakening of the extended family on the education of double orphans in Lesotho through in-depth interviews with participants from 3 of the 10 districts in Lesotho. The findings reveal that in Lesotho the...
  18. Conceptions of mental health among Ugandan youth orphaned by AIDS

    Conceptions of mental health among Ugandan youth orphaned by AIDS

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Sheila Harms Ruth Kizza Joshua Sebunnya Susan Jack
    The AIDS epidemic has disproportionately affected developing or low-income sub-Saharan African countries. Within the context of the epidemic, children and youth are at risk of losing their parents at an early age. The experience of orphanhood due to AIDS has...
  19. Fostering children affected by AIDS in Richards Bay, South Africa: a qualitative study of grandparents' experiences

    Fostering children affected by AIDS in Richards Bay, South Africa: a qualitative study of grandparents' experiences

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Evalyne Nyasani --- , United Kingdom Erna Sterberg --- , South Africa Helen Smith --- , United Kingdom
    Grandparents are increasingly becoming the primary carers of children orphaned by the HIV epidemic in South Africa. Traditional family roles are being reversed as aging family members take responsibility for the physical and psychosocial needs of children. This study uses...
  20. The experiences of family caregivers concerning their care of HIV/AIDS orphans

    The experiences of family caregivers concerning their care of HIV/AIDS orphans

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: South African Family Practice • Authors: KE Hlabyago --- Dept of Family Medicine and PHC, Faculty of Health Sciences, South Africa GA Ogunbanjo --- Dept of Family Medicine and PHC, Faculty of Health Sciences, South Africa
    Introduction: The HIV/AIDS pandemic is reducing life expectancy and raising mortality. An increasing orphan population is perhaps the most tragic and long-term legacy of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. By 2010 sub-Saharan Africa is expected to have an estimated 50 million orphans...
  21. School and community participation of in-school teenagers affected by orphanhood in a rural South Africa setting

    School and community participation of in-school teenagers affected by orphanhood in a rural South Africa setting

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Journal of Psychology in Africa • Authors: Alfred Motalenayne Modise --- Faculty of Education, South Africa
    This study investigated schooling and community participation qualities of teenage learners affected by orphanhood in rural secondary South African setting. Participants were a purposive sample of 30 teenage learners, (female = 60% black = 98%, 12 to 19 years old)...
  22. Nutritional, immune, micronutrient and health status of HIV-infected children in care centres in Mangaung

    Nutritional, immune, micronutrient and health status of HIV-infected children in care centres in Mangaung

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: South African Journal of Clinical Nutrition • Authors: L. Steenkamp --- Nutrition Consultant in Private Practice, A. Dannhauser --- Department of Dietetics and Human Nutrition, South Africa D. Walsh --- General Practitioner, G. Joubert --- Department of Biostatistics, South Africa Fj Veldman --- School of Health Technology, South Africa E. Van der Walt --- Department of Dietetics and Human Nutrition, South Africa C. Cox --- Department of Dietetics and Human Nutrition, South Africa Mk Hendricks --- School of Child and Adolescent Health, South Africa H. Dippenaar --- Department of Family Practice, South Africa
    Aim: To assess the nutritional, immune, micronutrient and health status of antiretroviral-naïve HIV-infected children.
  23. Marriage, kinship and childcare in the aftermath of AIDS: rethinking “orphanhood” in the South African lowveld

    Marriage, kinship and childcare in the aftermath of AIDS: rethinking “orphanhood” in the South African lowveld

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Anthropology Southern Africa • Authors: Isak Niehaus --- Anthropology Division, United Kingdom
    In this article I consider the significance of marriage from the vantage point of children’s affiliation to domestic units during the era of South Africa’s AIDS pandemic. Drawing on multi-temporal fieldwork in Impalahoek, a village in the Bushbuckridge municipality of...
  24. Mixed results: the protective role of schooling in the HIV epidemic in Swaziland

    Mixed results: the protective role of schooling in the HIV epidemic in Swaziland

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: African Journal of AIDS Research • Authors: Alan Whiteside --- Balsillie School of International Affairs, Canada Andriana Vinnitchok --- Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada Tengetile Dlamini --- National Emergency Response Council on HIV and AIDS, Switzerland Khanya Mabuza --- National Emergency Response Council on HIV and AIDS, Switzerland
    Swaziland has the highest HIV prevalence in the world. It is recognised that young women, especially adolescents, are particularly vulnerable to HIV infection and bear a disproportionate burden of HIV incidence. The HIV data from Swaziland show the location of...
  25. Gendered adversity and mental health of adolescents orphaned by AIDS in a rural South African community: An exploratory study

    Gendered adversity and mental health of adolescents orphaned by AIDS in a rural South African community: An exploratory study

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Journal of Psychology in Africa • Authors: Mokoena P. Maepa --- Clinical Psychology Department, South Africa Oluyinka Ojedokun --- Department of Pure & Applied Psychology, Nigeria Erhabor S. Idemudia --- School of Postgraduate Studies, South Africa Palesa Morubane --- Clinical Psychology Department, Vryburg Hospital, South Africa
    This study explored gender differences in adversity and mental health among South African adolescents orphaned by AIDS. Adolescents (N = 121; females = 45.5%; mean age 14.14 years, SD = 2.09) self-reported their childhood adversities and probable mental ill health...
  26. Translating research into policy: the case of orphans and vulnerable children in South Africa

    Translating research into policy: the case of orphans and vulnerable children in South Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS • Authors: Olive Shisana --- Human Sciences Research Council, Julia Louw --- University of the Western Cape,
    Policies are often developed without taking into account social science research findings and recommendations, despite the plethora of such research studies. This is largely because researchers and policy makers often work in isolation, yet if they worked synergistically they could...
  27. Assistance needed for the integration of orphaned and vulnerable children — views of South African family and community members

    Assistance needed for the integration of orphaned and vulnerable children — views of South African family and community members

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS • Authors: Melvyn Freeman --- Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS and Health Research Programme of the HSRC, Nkululeko Nkomo --- Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS and Health Research Programme of the HSRC,
    Guardianship within families is often regarded as the most viable and preferred option for orphaned and vulnerable children (OVC). However, this will place a considerably increased burden on the new caregivers of these children. This study examines whether assistance to...
  28. An enumeration of orphans and analysis of the problems and wishes of orphans: the case of Kariba, Zimbabwe

    An enumeration of orphans and analysis of the problems and wishes of orphans: the case of Kariba, Zimbabwe

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS • Authors: Jaqualine F Mangoma --- University of Zimbabwe Lake Kariba Research Station, Moses J Chimbari --- University of Botswana's Harry Oppenheimer Okavanga Research Centre, Elmon Dhlomo --- University of Zimbabwe Lake Kariba Research Station,
    In southern Africa, HIV and AIDS accounts for the largest proportion of orphans. Very often the orphaned children become destitute, and young girls in particular become more vulnerable to HIV and AIDS as they try to fend for the rest...
  29. The quality of material care provided by grandparents for their orphaned grandchildren in the context of HIV/AIDS and poverty: a study of Kopanong municipality, Free State

    The quality of material care provided by grandparents for their orphaned grandchildren in the context of HIV/AIDS and poverty: a study of Kopanong municipality, Free State

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS • Authors: Tsiliso Tamasane --- Human and Social Development Research Programmes, Human Sciences Research Council, Judith Head --- Department of Sociology, University of Cape Town,
    A pervasive argument in the literature on AIDS orphans in South Africa is that grandparents, who often care for their orphaned grandchildren, lack the material means to provide adequate care. This study investigated that claim in an area of ubiquitous...
  30. Laughter therapy as an intervention to promote psychological well-being of volunteer community care workers working with HIV-affected families

    Laughter therapy as an intervention to promote psychological well-being of volunteer community care workers working with HIV-affected families

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: SAHARA-J: Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS • Authors: Irene Hatzipapas --- , , South Africa Maretha J. Visser --- , , South Africa Estie Janse van Rensburg --- , , South Africa
    The study explores the experiences of volunteer community care workers working with HIV-affected families, participating in laughter therapy. Laughter therapy is being used as an intervention to positively influence individuals experiencing various forms of emotional distress. Community care workers play...
  31. Coping strategies and mental health of adolescents impacted by parental HIV and AIDS in rural South Africa

    Coping strategies and mental health of adolescents impacted by parental HIV and AIDS in rural South Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Journal of Child & Adolescent Mental Health • Authors: Comfort Asanbe --- College of Staten Island, City University of New York, USA Maretha Visser --- University of Pretoria, South Africa Anne-Gloria Moleko --- University of Pretoria, South Africa Catherine Makwakwa --- , South Africa
    Objective: The study explored whether orphanhood status as well as coping strategies predicted mental health outcomes in orphans and vulnerable adolescents who participated in an NGO-supported programme in rural South Africa.