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Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 www.aids2012.org Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council, South Africa Non-Abstract Session Children Growing up with HIV AIDS 2012, Washington DC 25 July 2012
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Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

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Page 1: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Development challenges in early development

– and HIV

Linda RichterHuman Sciences Research Council, South Africa

Non-Abstract Session Children Growing up with HIV

AIDS 2012, Washington DC

25 July 2012

Page 2: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Outline• Early development• New science of early child development –

longitudinal perspectives• Experience-expectant, experience-dependent

systems – programming• HIV and ART effects on early development• Conclusions

Page 3: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Early development• Children’s development occurs progressively, in

sequence– One thing follows the other and is dependent on what

goes before – There is no going back

• Incomplete, ill-formed stages can lead to deficits– Especially in the absence of self-righting influences

and experience– Many poor children have few, if any, second chances

• Early development is a period of unique susceptibility to environmental influences

Page 4: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

The first 1000 days270 (pregnancy) + 365 (year 1) + 365 (year 2)

= 1000 days

• Period of unique susceptibility to deficits and compensation

• Driven by genetic potential, modified by environment

• Epigenetics – genetic potential modified in utero ad early infancy by prevailing = anticipated

environment • Subsequently less amenable to modification

Page 5: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Developmental progression

Conception, pregnancy, birth & neonatal period

Infancy (birth-2yrs)

Preschool period

Middle childhood and adolescence

First 1000 days

Maternal health

Page 6: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Long-term consequences

Of exposures and experiences in early development on long-term:

• Health• Human capital • Psychosocial adjustment

Data from low and middle income countries

Page 7: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Long-term studies in LMICsCOHORTS – Consortium of Health-Oriented Research in

Transitioning Societies

Page 8: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Health• Poor nutrition and growth, during foetal

development and infancy- Constrain adult height, offspring size (inter-generational)- Increase risks for chronic disease – obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease- Increase risks for mental illness

• Early exposure to adverse experiences (neglect, domestic violence, parental mental ill-health

or substance use)- Increase risk of chronic disease, mental ill-health and

social maladjustment

Page 9: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Human capital Stunting before age 3 years (<2SD) is associated with: • Less education

- Lower cognitive test scores

- Fewer grades passed

- Less learning

- average ± minus1 grade of schooling

• Earnings– 8-20% less income– Food supplementation <3yrs, 40 yr follow-up (Guatemala)

• Up to 46% difference in income• Fewer hours worked

Page 10: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Psychosocial adjustment

• Poor in utero growth mental illness (famine studies)

• Adverse childhood experiences (ACE) - Tobacco, alcohol and drug use, suicide risk,

depression• Toxic stress – stress responsivity - revving

engine, hair trigger reaction- Influences ‘internal working models,

expectations of relationships- Emotional and behavioural control

Page 11: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

HIV (& ARVs) - early development

• Pregnancy and delivery• Birth weight and growth• Feeding• Social and economic security• Psychosocial care• Maternal wellbeing and mental health

Page 12: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

HIV - pregnancy complications• Been aware of possibility since at least1990• Increased spontaneous abortion, perinatal

mortality, prematurity, SGA, low birth weight, neonatal mortality (Brocklehurst & French 1998)

• Earlier studies– ? poor pregnancy weight gain– Seemingly not associated with anti-viral drugs

(Schulte et al, 2007)

– Rather, advanced HIV disease, malaria, intestinal parasites

Page 13: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

HIV, ART and mortality

Brady et al (2011)- PACTG, USA, multicentre- 3 553 children, 1993-2006- 298 deaths- Deaths decreased from 7.2 to 0.8 per 100 person-

years by 2000, then stable- Co-variates – illness stage, time HAART initiation- Mortality ± 30 times higher than general USA pediatric

population (similar in UK)- Mortality due to infections, multi-organ failure (end stage

AIDS)

Page 14: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

HIV, ART and growth

Nielsen-Saines et al 2012 – Brazil, India, Thailand, Malawi, SA, Zimbabwe (n=236)

- Infants followed up for 18 mo – survival very good- 77% gestation age >37 wks, 86% birth weight ≥2.5 kg - 8% congenital abnormalities; 30% neonatal medical conditions- Growth inversely correlated with maternal viral load – up to 18mo - 38% infants serious adverse events eg anaemia - associated with

less/shorter maternal ARV exposure - ?Finding related to careful surveillance?

Filtreau (2009) – poorer physical growth and development amongst HIV exposed, but uninfected children

Page 15: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

HIV, ART and nutrition

Infant and young child feeding• Low rates of exclusive breastfeeding

• Early weaning, partly as a result of confusing policy (Kuhn & Coovadia, 2012)

• Inadequate weaning diet, feeding frequency low, non-active and non-responsive feeding

• HIV, ART and effects of poor nutrition confounded, including by low levels of active, responsive

feeding due to caregiving stresses

Page 16: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

HIV, ART and developmentAbukaker et al (2008) – HIV: 7 studies in SSA, results comparable to West- Delayed motor development most apparent, detected earliest- Mental development delays by 18mo- Language by 24mo – language, mental harder to measure?- Less secure attachment, less positive affect

Sherr et al (2009) – HIV: systematic review 42 studies- Quality variable- 81% of studies found cognitive deficits

Williams et al (2010) – ART: PACTG, USA, multi-centre- 92% exposed to ART in utero, 8% not- Bayley Developmental Scales at 1 year- No differences in neurodevelopment (environmental effects?)

Page 17: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Home environment

• Biological and environmental factors jointly influence developmental outcomes

• In the USA, behavioural and emotional problems of CLWH attributed to social risks and not to HIV infection per se (Mellins et al 2004)

• The social context of many families affected by HIV involves poverty, dislocation, isolation, stress,bereavement

• Maternal wellbeing, including depression, and effects on caregiving

Page 18: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Lancet “Child Development” series 2007 and 2011 review the impacts of poverty and poor home environments on young children’s development

over the long term

Page 19: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Caregiving

Infants and young children - experience-expectant and experience-dependent caregiving

• Emotionally available and responsive• Alert to and delighted by the child’s unfolding

developmental timetable• Attentive to signs of distress, discomfort, illness• Self-efficacy and capacity to respond

• Requires:• Good health, lack of stress, emotional wellbeing• Support from partner and intimate others• Security and safety

Page 20: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

HIV and caregivingConditions for optimal caregiving may not be present

• Ill-health, preoccupation and anxiety – evidence on parenting in context of chronic illness

• Lack of support and security, isolation

Depression

• Life time prevalence among women 10-24%• Higher amongst women of lower SES, during pregnancy and

when children are young• Amongst pregnant WLH as high as 53% (Levine et al, 2008);

Chibanda et al, 2010)

• Associated with poor child outcomes, treatment non-adherence generally (DiMatteo et al, 2000)

Page 21: Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012 Development challenges in early development – and HIV Linda Richter Human Sciences Research Council,

Washington D.C., USA, 22-27 July 2012www.aids2012.org

Conclusions• Available evidence suggests that long-term care and

support critical to the survival, growth, health and wellbeing of CLWH and negative children exposed to HIV and ART

• Less evidence than we should have on this important issue – much more research needed- Eg first trimester exposure to ARV during embryogenesis

- Critical to follow-up- HIV+ children in LMICs- HIV- but HIV and ARV–exposed children in LMICs

• Like with breastfeeding, advocate for knowledge and practice to make children’s development

safer, healthier and happier.