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Category: literature

HIV Teenagers to Adults

posted: 21/02/2011

young people sat and chatting on a bench Older teenagers with HIV are our HIV pioneers because they are the first generation of young people growing up with HIV. Being the first at anything is often exciting, but with HIV it can be much less fun and more of a struggle.
 

Making the change better

The Children and Young People HIV Network are working to make it easier to move from being a teenager with HIV to being an adult with HIV.

Young people with HIV have two main challenges 

  • growing up from a child to adult with HIV (e.g. beginnning sex and relationships with HIV)
  • moving from children's HIV clinic and education, into adult HIV services and employment or claiming benefits with HIV.


The Children and Young People’s HIV Network have now finished checking all the expert articles and books about changing from child to adult with HIV in a ‘literature review’.

They looked to learn lessons about improving the change from child to adult, including learning from experience with other conditions like diabetes and epilespy.


The HIV child to adult change literature review is here 

The review 

  • has statistics about young people with HIV in the UK
  • finds existing policies and guidelines for the child to adult change
  • looks for useful lessons from other longterm conditions, like diabetes
  • considers the needs of carers and family
  • considers rural areas with very low numbers of young people with HIV.

 

Professionals tell us

Last week we pointed out the useful article where HIV health workers describe helping teenagers to make the change from child to adult with HIV, which is in the 200th issue of HIVTreatment Update.

Teens talking life with HIV
Two young people making these changes talk about their own lives. JD Bailey (20, female) talks about growing up with HIV, and Max, (19, male) talks about telling others about HIV
 

‘Transition of care from a paediatric to adult setting is not specific to HIV … However there are important differences … with HIV which may make this process more difficult’  Lyall, 2007.


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