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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Jul 1.
Published in final edited form as: Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2018 Jul;37(7):678–685. doi: 10.1097/INF.0000000000001875

Table 2.

Prevalence of speech and language impairments among monolingual HIV-exposed uninfected participants.

Impairment Type
Age Domain Primary Concomitanta None Total
3b Speech 13 (7%) 3 (2%) 159 (91%) 175
Language 25 (13%) 3 (2%) 164 (84%) 195d
Vocabulary 35 (19%) 4 (2%) 146 (78%) 186e
5c Speech 13 (7%) 3 (2%) 163 (91%) 179
Language 66 (16%) 71 (17%) 276 (67%) 414e
Vocabulary 30 (7%) 36 (9%) 350 (84%) 416
Grammar 59 (14%) 49 (12%) 306 (74%) 415e
a

Concomitant Impairment indicates speech or language impairment concurrent with hearing or cognitive impairment (determined within one year of the 3rd or 5th birthday)

b

Age three impairments based on the Goldman Fristoe Test of Articulation (speech), Test of Early Language Development (language), and Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (vocabulary).

c

Age five impairments based on the Goldman Fristoe Test of Articulation (speech), and Test of Language Development (language, vocabulary, grammar).

d

3 children with language impairment that could not be classified as primary or concomitant because they did not complete the cognitive assessment were excluded

e

1 child with language impairment that could not be classified as primary or concomitant because they did not complete the cognitive assessment was excluded