| Literature DB >> 23738056 |
Janet M Turan1, Abigail M Hatcher, Merab Odero, Maricianah Onono, Jannes Kodero, Patrizia Romito, Emily Mangone, Elizabeth A Bukusi.
Abstract
Objective. Pregnant women are especially vulnerable to adverse outcomes related to HIV infection and gender-based violence (GBV). We aimed at developing a program for prevention and mitigation of the effects of GBV among pregnant women at an antenatal clinic in rural Kenya. Methods. Based on formative research with pregnant women, male partners, and service providers, we developed a GBV program including comprehensive clinic training, risk assessments in the clinic, referrals supported by community volunteers, and community mobilization. To evaluate the program, we analyzed data from risk assessment forms and conducted focus groups (n = 2 groups) and in-depth interviews (n = 25) with healthcare workers and community members. Results. A total of 134 pregnant women were assessed during a 5-month period: 49 (37%) reported violence and of those 53% accepted referrals to local support resources. Qualitative findings suggested that the program was acceptable and feasible, as it aided pregnant women in accessing GBV services and raised awareness of GBV. Community collaboration was crucial in this low-resource setting. Conclusion. Integrating GBV programs into rural antenatal clinics has potential to contribute to both primary and secondary GBV prevention. Following further evaluation, this model may be deemed applicable for rural communities in Kenya and elsewhere in East Africa.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23738056 PMCID: PMC3657417 DOI: 10.1155/2013/736926
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1240
Approach for implementing an integrated community-supported clinic-based GBV program.
| Implementation steps* | Methods | Key findings |
|---|---|---|
| (I) Establish relationships with key partners | Conducted initial discussions with key stakeholders | Local Ministry of Health and FACES leadership were interested in developing methods to address GBV within health services |
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| (II) Define the nature of the problem | (i) FGDs† with pregnant women ( | (a) Specific types of GBV commonly experienced by women in this setting: beating, forced sex, verbal abuse, denial of reproductive choice, neglect, and being kicked out of their homes |
| (b) Triggers for GBV include woman making decisions (e.g., HIV testing) without partner consent, woman failing to perform household duties, man for misallocating money, woman disclosing HIV status, either partner using alcohol, and either partner is suspected of infidelity | ||
| (ii) IDIs† ( | (c) Help-seeking behaviors: women were often reluctant to press formal charges, and in many cases preferred to use more informal community and family mechanisms. | |
| (d) Local resources do exist for GBV, but those that do exist tend to be weak or inefficient and lack linkages to one another | ||
| (e) Primary healthcare workers are trusted service providers, already being accessed by pregnant women in rural areas, and are a potential resource for primary and secondary prevention of GBV. | ||
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| (III) Identify potentially effective programs | Convened stakeholders to review existing GBV curricula | Relevant portions of GBV curricula for health workers from Kenya, India, South Africa, and Latin America were identified. |
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| (IV) Develop policies and strategies | Designed locally relevant program using formative research and stakeholder input | Components of an effective program, as defined by stakeholders, were as follows: |
| (a) building capacity of health workers, | ||
| (b) bolstering multisectoral linkages, | ||
| (c) enhancing community sensitization and awareness (with a special focus on reaching men) | ||
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| (V) Create an action plan | Established program model | (See |
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| (VI) Evaluate learning | Conducted a mixed-method evaluation using focus groups ( | (See |
*Adapted from the WHO [29].
†FGDs: focus group discussions; IDIs: in-depth interviews; NGOs: nongovernmental organizations; FBOs: faith-based organizations.
Figure 1GBV program components.
Figure 2GBV screening by month, December 2010–April 2011.
GBV cases handled by community referral persons (n = 33).
| Characteristic | Number of cases |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Female | 30 |
| Male | 3 |
| Who referred to CRP | |
| Clinic | 10 |
| Local administrator | 8 |
| Village elders | 2 |
| Client came directly to CRP | 13 |
| Type(s) of violence | |
| Physical only | 12 |
| Sexual only | 6 |
| Emotional only | 1 |
| Economic only | 6 |
| Physical and emotional | 1 |
| Physical and economic | 5 |
| Physical and sexual | 1 |
| Supported referral made to | |
| District hospital | 3 |
| Counselor at women's NGO | 9 |
| Probono lawyer | 3 |
| Local clinic | 6 |
| Local administrator | 5 |
| Police | 1 |
| Pastor | 2 |