“…Various rates of disclosure of parental HIV/AIDS to children have been reported, ranging from 0% (Esposito et al, 1999) to 74% (Armistead et al, 1997(Armistead et al, , 2001Bauman et al, Camacho et al, 2002;Forsyth et al, 1996;Lee & Rotheram-Borus, 2002;Murphy et al, 2001;Murphy, Marelich et al, 2002;Nagler et al, 1995;Niebuhr et al, 1994;Nostlinger et al, 2004;Ostrom et al, 2006;Pilowsky et al, 1999;Rotheram-Borus et al, 1997;Schrimshaw & Siegel, 2002;Shaffer et al, 2001;Sowell et al, 1997;Tompkins et al, 1999;Wiener et al, 1998), and likely depend on such factors as child age, disease progression, quality of the parent-child relationship, and general cultural influences on disclosure-and child-related beliefs. Although parents commonly cite protection from distress as a major reason for withholding illness-related information from children, clinical observation indicates that children typically have some sense that something is wrong anyway (Melvin, 1996).…”