%0 Journal Article %T Maternal HIV disclosure to HIV-uninfected children in rural South Africa: a pilot study of a family-based intervention %A Tamsen J Rochat %A Ntombizodumo Mkwanazi %A Ruth Bland %J BMC Public Health %D 2013 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2458-13-147 %X This paper describes the development of a family-centred, structured intervention to support mothers to disclose their HIV status to their HIV-negative school-aged children in rural South Africa, an area with high HIV prevalence. The intervention package includes printed materials, therapeutic tools and child-friendly activities and games to support age-appropriate maternal HIV disclosure, and has three main aims: (1) to benefit family relationships by increasing maternal HIV disclosure; (2) to increase children's knowledge about HIV and health; (3) to improve the quality of custody planning for children with HIV-positive mothers. We provide the theoretical framework for the intervention design and report the results of a small pilot study undertaken to test its acceptability in the local context.The intervention was piloted with 24 Zulu families, all mothers were HIV-positive and had an HIV-negative child aged 6--9 years. Lay counsellors delivered the six session intervention over a six to eight week period. Qualitative data were collected on the acceptability, feasibility and the effectiveness of the intervention in increasing disclosure, health promotion and custody planning. All mothers disclosed something to their children: 11/24 disclosed fully using the words "HIV" while 13/24 disclosed partially using the word "virus".The pilot study found the intervention was feasible and acceptable to mothers and counsellors, and provides preliminary evidence that participation in the intervention encouraged disclosure and health promotion. The pilot methodology and small sample size has limitations and further research is required to test the potential of this intervention. A larger demonstration project with 300 families is currently underway. %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/13/147/abstract