| Literature DB >> 25495605 |
Joyce Wamoyi1, Gerry Mshana, Aika Mongi, Nyasule Neke, Saidi Kapiga, John Changalucha.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Young people particularly women are at increased risk of undesirable sexual and reproductive health (SRH) outcomes. Structural factors have been reported as driving some of these risks. Although several interventions have targeted some of the structural drivers for adolescent's SRH risk, little has been done to consolidate such work. This would provide a platform for coordinated efforts towards adolescent's SRH. We provide a narrative summary of interventions in sub-Saharan Africa (sSA) addressing the structural drivers of adolescents' SRH risk, explore pathways of influence, and highlight areas for further work.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25495605 PMCID: PMC4290135 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4755-11-88
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Descriptions for iterventions for young people
| Intervention/country | Aim | Intervention method/design & duration | Target group &Sample size | Outcomes/results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| 1) Shaping the Health of Adolescents in Zimbabwe (SHAZ!) Program[ | Increased knowledge, Increased economic empowerment, Reduced inter-generational TS |
| - 50 poor orphaned, out-of-school, girls aged 16-19 years | - Increase in HIV-related knowledge and relationship |
| - Uncontrolled study for 6 months | - Power, no significant change in current sexual activity or condom use at last sex | |||
| - Microcredit loans | - Living on the | - Increased relationship power[ | ||
| - Business skills training | outskirts of Harare, Zimbabwe | - Increased HIV risk through new mobility and economic strategies | ||
| - Mentorship | - 315 aadolescent girls, orphans, average age 18 | - Increase in HIV-related knowledge and relationship power, no significant change in current sexual activity or condom use at last sex | ||
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| Randomized clinical trial (RCT) | ||||
| Study | - Decrease in food insecurity | |||
| Duration 24 months, Adaptation of Stepping Stones, including expanded training including negotiation skills, Integrated social support | - Increase in equitable gender norms | |||
| - Physical and sexual violence reduce by 58% over a 2-year period | ||||
| Access to HIV and reproductive health services | ||||
| 2) Intervention with Microfinance for AIDS & Gender Equity (IMAGE)[ | Reduced HIV risk behaviour | Cluster randomised trial, duration of 3 year | - A sample of 430 poor women aged 14-35 years identified through participatory wealth ranking | - 55% increase in experience of IPV after 1 year |
| - Increase in HIV knowledge, communication, testing & risk reduction | ||||
| - 32% reduction in communication with household members to young people in households | ||||
| - Greater involvement in collective action and social groups | ||||
| - No impact on HIV incidence in wider community | ||||
| - No difference in unprotected sex at last occurrence with non-spousal partner in past 12 months | ||||
| - 11% increase in condom use | ||||
| At last sex | ||||
| - Microfinance (individual borrowing and repayment of loans over 10 or 20 week cycles) | ||||
| - Participatory learning and action curriculum integrated into loan meetings (10 training sessions done within centre meetings every 2 weeks (approx. 6 months)) Community mobilization for 6 to 9 months following initial training | ||||
| - HIV prevention education | ||||
| 3) The Tap & Reposition Youth (TRY)[ | Increased reproductive health & HIV knowledge Increased sexual negotiation skills Increased Income & savings | Pre-test, post-test design, with matched comparison (222 pairs), length of participation ranged from <1 year (n = 71), 1 to 2 years (n = 81) and 2 to 3 years (n = 70) | - A total of Out-of-school females aged 16-22 years | - Increase Savings |
| - Group-based microfinance loans, Livelihoods skills training | ||||
| - RH & HIV prevention training | ||||
| - Increase in liberal attitudes towards gender roles | ||||
| - Living in low income & slum areas of Nairobi | - 1.7 times more likely to refuse sex than girls in control group | |||
| - 3 times more likely to insist on condom use than girls in control group | ||||
| 4) Incentivising safe sex: a randomised trial of conditional cash transfers for HIV and sexually transmitted infection prevention in rural Tanzania[ | To evaluate the use of conditional cash transfers as a HIV and sexually transmitted infection prevention strategy to incentivise safe sex | An unblended, individually randomised controlled trial | - A sample of 2399 persons aged 18-30 years | - High value CCT arm v.s. controls: adjusted RR = 0.073 (95% CI 0.47-0.99) |
| - Intervention arms: low value conditional cash transfer v.s., high value conditional cash transfer | - High value CCT arm v.s., low value CCT arm: RR = 0.76 (95% CI0.49 -0.92) | |||
| - Significant reduction in the combined point prevalence of four curable STIs among high value CCT arm | ||||
| - Tested participants every 4 months over a 12 months period for the presence of common STIs | ||||
| 5) Survival skills training for orphans (SSTOP)[ | To reduce transactional sex | Intervention: | - Females aged 14-19 years | Qualitative & anecdotal evidence found: |
| - Responsible for | - Increased financial organization | |||
| Income generating skills | caring for younger siblings, & other disadvantaged girls | - Increase vocational skills | ||
| - Increased economic empowerment | ||||
| - Girls aged 9-13 learned to make soap, candles, sewing, or knitting | - Reduction in early sexual activity without protection | |||
| - Girls aged 14-19 attended sewing classes; HIV prevention education; & gender training including legal protection for women | ||||
| 6) Creating futures[ | Objective 1: | Pilot intervention combining Stepping Stones and Creating Futures | - Piloted in urban informal settlements in with 232 young people (110 men, 122 women) |
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| To strengthen young people’s livelihoods and economic power through reflection and action | ||||
| - Livelihoods improved for women and men after the intervention | ||||
| - The study design was an interrupted time-series design, with baseline measures at zero and two weeks and follow-ups at six and 12 months post-baseline. | ||||
| - Average age of 21.7 years | ||||
| - Mean earnings in the past month increased over the 12 months. For women this increased from US$14 at baseline to US$49 (a 345% increase (p < 0.0001)) at 12 months and for men from US$36 at baseline to US$104 (a 283% increase (p < 0.0001)) at 12 months | ||||
| Objective 2: Aimed to reduce women’s experience and men’s perpetration of physical or sexual IPV | ||||
| - Consisted of livelihoods and economic power intervention involving 21 sessions of three hours, delivered by trained peer facilitators | ||||
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| Women reported a statistically significant reduction in their experience of sexual or physical IPV in the past three months from 29.9% at baseline to 18.9% at 12 months (a 37% reduction (p < 0.046) | ||||
| - Women’s experience of sexual IPV also declined significantly from 11.1% at baseline to 3.6% at 12 months (p < 0.018) | ||||
| - Men’s perpetration of physical or sexual IPV in the past 3 months, while declining from 25% to 21.9% (a 23% reduction) was not statistically | ||||
| Significant | ||||
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| 7) Zomba cash transfer[ | Increased income Increased EducationReduce HIV risk | Randomised control trial, 2 years Cash transfers (CTs) conditional and on regular school attendance v.s. unconditional CTs (average amount US $10) | A sample of 1289 never married girls aged 13-22 years in 176 enumeration areas in Zomba |
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| - Reduced onset of sexual activity by 31.1% | ||||
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| - Intervention group had 64% reduction in HIV prevalence and 76% reduction in HSV-2 prevalence | ||||
| - Reduced age of partners in those in intervention | ||||
| - No significant differences between conditional and unconditional intervention group, although the study was not powered to show this | ||||
| 8) Western Kenya schooling intervention[ | To reduce HIV incidence in schools | Randomised control trial, 4 years, Comparing 4 school-based HIV/AIDS interventions: | A sample of 70,000 school boys and girls in school | Teacher training: |
| - No impact childbearing | ||||
| - Increase in HIV knowledge If pregnant, more likely to be married | ||||
| - Training teachers in HIV/AIDS curriculum | Critical thinking: | |||
| - Increase knowledge & condom use | ||||
| - Critical thinking on role of condoms | - No impact on sexual activitySchool uniforms: | |||
| - Reduction in dropout rates 17% in boys, 14% in girls | ||||
| - Reducing the cost of education by providing school uniforms | ||||
| - Reduction in teen marriage 9% in girls | ||||
| - Reduced childbearing 12%Relative risks: | ||||
| - Relative risk campaign | ||||
| - Reduction in childbearing 28% | ||||
| - Increased sexual activity in boys | ||||
| - No impact on pregnant teen couples | ||||
| - Reduction in cross-generational pregnancies 61% | ||||
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| 9) Binti Pamoja Centre (Daughters United centre)[ | Create safe spaces for girls to reduce: violence, Female genital mutilation, Sexual abuse, Rape, Prostitution Poverty and Increase: Reproductive health knowledge, Financial education, Leadership & personal skills | Community intervention: | Girls aged 11-18 living in the Kibera slum |
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| - Sampled adolescents from 4 ethically distinct villages in Kibera | - Baseline data highlights social isolation for many girls & 55% of girls live with neither or only one parent | |||
| - Mapped all safe spaces in the community | ||||
| - >30 safe spaces established reaching >1000 girls | ||||
| - Used photography, drama, writing & group discussion | ||||
| - Positive changes in social networks, mobility & gender norms | ||||
| - Increased financial literacy, banking services usage, savings, & communication with parents/guardian on financial issues | ||||
| - Peer education & empowerment workshops | ||||
| - Developing skills in budgeting, savings, setting financial goals | ||||
| - Increased confidence & positive self-esteem | ||||
| - Provided educational scholarships | ||||
| 10) Siyakha Nentsha[ | A life-orientation program to improve lifelong skills & well being of young people | Quasi-experimental, control arm, 18 month follow-up, 4 years Three study arms: | Boys & girls aged 14-16 in schools | - Increased autonomy for girls in how they spend their money & control their lives |
| - Increased HIV related knowledge | ||||
| - Young men had reduced onset of sexual activity and fewer partners | ||||
| - SRH/HIV, social support, financial education | ||||
| - SRH/HIV & social support | ||||
| - Delayed Intervention (i.e. control group) | ||||
| 11) ICRW Vitu Newala[ | Understand specific vulnerabilities of adolescent girls and empower them, increase girls positive attitudes and beliefs on girls’ social protection | Pilot project Qualitative assessments throughout: | Adolescent girls | - Video parlours, discos & traditional initiation ceremonies identified as places where girls felt unsafe |
| - Repeating the same participatory learning activities, | - Community put in place laws & changed practices to provide social protection | |||
| - Series of IDIs with young people, | ||||
| - An evaluation workshop | ||||
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| 12) Soul City Institute for health & development[ | Increase: social change, Social mobilization, Advocacy and reduce HIV incidence | Promoting health & social change via TV, radio, & print Soul Buddyz: | Soul buddyz: | Soul City & Soul Buddys exposure |
| - Spin off of Soul City TV series using edutainment | - Children aged 8-14 years, their teachers & their caregivers | - Increased: Self-perceptions on risk, Resistance to peer pressure | ||
| One love: | ||||
| - One love: Adults | ||||
| - Statically significant shifts in social norms, especially sexual norms | ||||
| - Reduced Perception of | ||||
| - Challenged social norms on multiple & concurrent partnership | women’s dependence on men (68% vs. 61%, p < 0.05) | |||
| 13) Stepping Stones[ | Increase: Sexual health knowledge, Communication skills, Ccritical reflection and reduce Sexual health risk | Cluster randomised controlled trial, 2 years | A sample of 1077 HIV negative Persons aged 15-26 years, mostly attending school | - HIV IRR = 0.85 (95%CI: 0.60, 1.20; p = 0.35) |
| - HSV2 IRR = 0.69 (95%CI: 0.47, 1.03; p = 0.07) | ||||
| - 70 villages randomized to either 13 3-hour sessions and 3 peer group meetings, or a 3-hour session on safer sex and HIV. | ||||
| - Men’s disclosure of perpetrating severe Intimate partner violence reduced at 12 & 24 months (p = 0.11 & p = 0.05) | ||||
| - Reduced Problem drinking among men | ||||
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| 14) Families Matter! (FMP),[ | Reduce age at first sex and increase ppositive parenting practices | Community-based intervention using parent-child dyads, 2 years (2004-2006) | 375 Parents/carers of 10-12 year-olds | - Increased Parenting skills & communication about sexuality & risk reduction |
| Five consecutive 3-hour sessions on sexual risks and effective parent-child communication | - Parents’ attitudes regarding sexuality education changed positively. | |||
| Five of the six composite parenting scores reported by parents, and six of six reported by children, increased significantly at 1 year post-intervention. | ||||
| 15) Mema kwa Jamii (Good Things for Communities, | Reduce SRH risks in youth through improved parenting | Community-based pilot parenting intervention, 2007-2010 | Approximately 1355 parents of young people aged 10-18 years | Qualitative indications of impact on: |
| - Parents socialised their male children differently from female | ||||
| Opinion leaders in four communities trained to training peer parents on parenting following diffusion of innovation theory over a period of 1 year | ||||
| - Improved parent-child relationships and collective efficacy | ||||