The 10th symposium on children and adolescents with perinatal HIV exposure Session 2 - Supporting children and adolescents with perinatal HIV exposure to thrive

Over the past decade, we have convened international meetings alongside International AIDS Society conferences. This is to identify opportunities to inform health policy and programming to ensure that children with perinatal HIV exposure thrive to their fullest potential. Globally, there are now over 16 million children under 15 years of age who were exposed to HIV in utero, at birth and during breastfeeding. When a child is born HIV-free, it does not guarantee that they will thrive in a similar way to a child born to a woman who is not living with HIV. Research has shown increased vulnerability to infectious morbidity and mortality, poorer growth and neurodevelopmental deficits compared with children not exposed to HIV. Risk of health disparities and opportunities for resilience include biological, social and structural aetiologies. For the 10th Symposium on Children and Adolescents with Perinatal HIV Exposure, we will hold a pre-conference involving dialogue and presentations from families and adolescents affected by HIV, policy makers, clinicians and researchers. Presentations will span infancy through adolescence.

This session is the second out of three sessions part of the 10th symposium on children and adolescents with perinatal HIV exposure pre-conference. Watch session 1 here and session 3 here.

21 July 2024
English
Chair

Ute Feucht

University of Pretoria and Tshwane District Health Services

Speakers

Ute Feucht

University of Pretoria and Tshwane District Health Services

Session outline

Christina Laurenzi

Stellenbosch University

Building momentum towards enabling caregiving environments for children affected by HIV
Ceri Evans

Ceri Evans

University of Liverpool

Ensuring food security for school age children with perinatal HIV exposure
Kathryn Roberts

Kathryn Roberts

University College London

Double vulnerability - Child development among children with perinatal HIV exposure born to adolescent mothers

Ute Feucht

University of Pretoria and Tshwane District Health Services

Ceri Evans

Ceri Evans

University of Liverpool

Christina Laurenzi

Christina Laurenzi

Stellenbosch University

Kathryn Roberts

Kathryn Roberts

University College London

Q&A

Amara Ezeamama

Michigan State University

Sharing HIV Exposure Status with Children – Relationships with Anxiety, Depressive symptoms, Stress and Overall wellbeing of children affected by HIV in Uganda

Amara Ezeamama

Michigan State University

introduction

Helena Nangombe

YWEN

Daddicky Sauyere

Daddicky Sauyere

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Agnes Ronan

Agnes Ronan

Paediatric Adolescent Treatment Africa

Perspectives from parents and adolescents