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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 Aug 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2017 May 15;58(8):922–930. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.12729

Table 2.

Results of multi-level mixed models predicting child and caregiver outcomes

Child Outcomes
(n=170)
FSI-HIV
Effect:
Post
FSI-HIV
Effect:
3 months
Coefficient SE t-ratio P Coefficient SE t-ratio P
Depression – Child reporta −0.079 0.080 −0.992 0.323 −0.246 0.091 −2.695 0.009
Depression – Caregiver reporta −0.083 0.077 −1.068 0.287 −0.174 0.082 −2.127 0.035
Functional Impairment – Childa report −0.082 0.264 −0.310 0.757 0.002 0.252 0.007 0.995
Functional Impairment – Caregivera report −0.246 0.251 −0.978 0.329 −0.078 0.258 −0.301 0.764
Conduct Problems – Child reporta 0.385 0.438 0.879 0.380 0.458 0.420 1.092 0.276
Conduct Problems – Parent reporta −0.246 0.251 −0.978 0.329 −0.078 0.258 −0.301 0.764
Good Parenting – Child reportb −0.185 0.121 −1.530 0.127 −0.183 0.117 −1.559 0.120
Family Connectedness – Childb −0.192 0.121 −1.584 0.114 −0.131 0.126 −1.046 0.297
Caregiver Outcomes
(n=123)
FSI-HIV
Effect:
Post
FSI-HIV
Effect:
3 months
Coefficient SE t-ratio P Coefficient SE t-ratio P
Family Connectednessb 0.006 0.146 0.039 0.969 −0.028 0.146 −0.189 0.850
Good Parentingb −0.060 0.1181 −0.509 0.611 0.006 0.118 0.052 0.959
a

Poisson regression

b

Linear regression

Note. All models included whether a family had single or dual caregivers and family wealth as a covariates. Models predicting child outcomes also include child sex and child HIV-status as covariates, and models predicting caregiver outcomes include caregiver sex and HIV-status as covariates.