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Title

The Interplay Between HIV/AIDS-Infected Mothers' Depression and Their Children's Behavioral Crises in School.

Authors

Ellis, Walter L.

Abstract

Data from 49 HIV/AIDS-infected mothers with 132 school-age children were used in this study to examine the interplay between seropositive mothers' depression and their children's behavioral crises in school during the past academic school year in North Carolina. In a logistic regression analysis, seropositive mothers' depression increased (B = .13, p = .004) the likelihood of a behavioral crisis. Externalizing problems were the likely precipitators of behavioral crises for both the perinatally HIV/AIDS-infected and seronegative children. These latter children were likely to initiate fistfights or throw objects with the intent to physically harm their classmates or teachers. The author found in a bivariate analysis that seropositive mothers' depression was positively (r = .32, p = .02) related to their children's externalizing problems in school. Implications for school social work practice with depressed seropositive mothers are discussed.

Subjects

NORTH Carolina; BEHAVIOR disorders in children; CHI-squared test; COUNSELING; MENTAL depression; RESEARCH methodology; MOTHERS; PSYCHIATRIC social work; SELF-disclosure; STATISTICS; SURVEYS; T-test (Statistics); LOGISTIC regression analysis; HIV seroconversion; DATA analysis software

Publication

Social Work in Mental Health, 2011, Vol 9, Issue 5, p379

ISSN

1533-2985

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1080/15332985.2011.589771

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