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OBJECTIVE:In sub Saharan Africa one of the key challenges in assessment using neuropsychological tools has been the lack of adequately validated and easily implementable measures. This study will translate into English, adapt and standardize the Computerized Battery for Neuropsychological Evaluation of Children (BENCI). The BENCI battery will be adapted using back-translation design, comprehensive cultural adaptation and standardized in a case-control study involving two groups of children: HIV infected and HIV unexposed, uninfected children. The content adaptation will be iteratively carried out using knowledge of English and feedback from pilot testing with children. The proposed study will first involve the cultural adaptation of the BENCI. It will then recruit 544 children aged 8-11 years with half of them being HIV+, while the other half will be HIV unexposed-uninfected. Test-retest reliability will be analyzed using Pearson's correlation while ANOVA and correlational analyses will be used to calculate discriminant, convergent and construct validity. RESULTS:This study will result in an open access adequately adapted and standardized measure of neuropsychological functioning for use with children in East Africa. The protocol paper provides an opportunity to share the planned methods and approaches.

Original publication

DOI

10.1186/s13104-019-4830-y

Type

Journal

BMC research notes

Publication Date

09/12/2019

Volume

12

Addresses

Department of Clinical Medicine and Therapuetics, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, 10834-00400, Kenya. R.W.Maina@uvt.nl.

Keywords

Humans, HIV Infections, Case-Control Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Language, Neuropsychological Tests, Psychometrics, Demography, Translating, Computers, Child, Kenya, Female, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Mental Status and Dementia Tests