4.4 Article

The Asenze Cohort Study in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: protocol and cohort profile

Journal

EPIDEMIOLOGY AND HEALTH
Volume 44, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

KOREAN SOC EPIDEMIOLOGY
DOI: 10.4178/epih.e2022037

Keywords

Population-based cohort; Low-and-middle income country; South Africa; HIV; AIDS; Child and adolescent health; Child and adolescent development

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The Asenze cohort study in South Africa focuses on longitudinal assessment of children and their primary caregivers from childhood to adolescence. The study aims to understand the physical, cognitive, and social abilities and disabilities of children, as well as the determinants of health including biological, environmental, and social factors. The findings are expected to contribute to the development of community-informed interventions to promote well-being in South Africa and beyond.
The Asenze cohort is set in South Africa, a middle-income country impacted by one of the highest global rates of people living with HIV/AIDS and high levels of socioeconomic inequality. This longitudinal population-based cohort of children and their primary caregivers assesses household and caregiver functioning, child health, social well-being, and neuro-development from childhood through adolescence. Almost 1,600 children born at the peak of the human immunodeficiency virus epidemic (2003-2005) were followed (with their primary caregivers) in 3 waves, between 2008 and 2021, at average ages of 5, 7, and 16. Wave 3 is currently underway, having assessed over 1,100 of the original wave 1 children. Wave 4 begins in 2022. The study, with a dyadic structure, uses a broad range of measures, validated in South Africa or recommended for global use, that address physical, social and neuro-development in childhood and adolescence, and the social, health, and psychological status of chil-dren's primary caregivers. The Asenze study deepens our understanding of childhood physical, cognitive, and social abilities and/or disabilities, including risk-taking behaviors, and biological, environmental, and social determinants of health. We antici-pate the findings will contribute to the development of community-informed interventions to promote well-being in this South African population and elsewhere.

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