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Limited effectiveness of HIV prevention for young people in sub-Saharan Africa: studying the role of intervention and evaluation

On average, 2,500 young people (15-24 years) get infected with HIV every day; 80% of which live in sub-Saharan Africa. Since no cure or vaccine is available, reducing sexual risk behaviour in this group is crucial in tackling the epidemic. The general objective of this doctoral study was to improve...

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Autor principal: Michielsen, K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Universa Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3987367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24753945
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author Michielsen, K.
author_facet Michielsen, K.
author_sort Michielsen, K.
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description On average, 2,500 young people (15-24 years) get infected with HIV every day; 80% of which live in sub-Saharan Africa. Since no cure or vaccine is available, reducing sexual risk behaviour in this group is crucial in tackling the epidemic. The general objective of this doctoral study was to improve the effectiveness of HIV prevention interventions for young people in sub-Saharan Africa. First, we assessed the overall effectiveness of such interventions (systematic literature review, meta-analysis). Secondly, we evaluated a school-based peer-led HIV prevention interventions in Rwanda (longitudinal, non-randomized controlled trial), to get insight into how interventions are developed, implemented and evaluated. While the first two objectives demonstrated limited effectiveness, the third objective aimed to identify reasons for this limited effectiveness: a) baseline characteristics of respondents that predict participation were identified (using data from objective 2); b) we studied determinants of young people’s sexual behavior using a qualitative ‘mailbox study’ that assessed the spontaneous thoughts of Rwandan adolescents on sexuality; c) we assessed the role of one specific structural factor: education (literature review and analysis of existing datasets); d) we assessed the theoretical underpinnings of existing HIV prevention interventions for young people in sub-Saharan Africa (literature review). Based on these studies, we discuss two main reasons for the observed limited effectiveness: factors associated with the intervention (strong focus on cognitions and moral, and implementation issues), and with evaluation (design, power, indicators). Recommendations for improving interventions, evaluations and for further research are provided.
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spelling pubmed-39873672014-04-21 Limited effectiveness of HIV prevention for young people in sub-Saharan Africa: studying the role of intervention and evaluation Michielsen, K. Facts Views Vis Obgyn PhD Summary On average, 2,500 young people (15-24 years) get infected with HIV every day; 80% of which live in sub-Saharan Africa. Since no cure or vaccine is available, reducing sexual risk behaviour in this group is crucial in tackling the epidemic. The general objective of this doctoral study was to improve the effectiveness of HIV prevention interventions for young people in sub-Saharan Africa. First, we assessed the overall effectiveness of such interventions (systematic literature review, meta-analysis). Secondly, we evaluated a school-based peer-led HIV prevention interventions in Rwanda (longitudinal, non-randomized controlled trial), to get insight into how interventions are developed, implemented and evaluated. While the first two objectives demonstrated limited effectiveness, the third objective aimed to identify reasons for this limited effectiveness: a) baseline characteristics of respondents that predict participation were identified (using data from objective 2); b) we studied determinants of young people’s sexual behavior using a qualitative ‘mailbox study’ that assessed the spontaneous thoughts of Rwandan adolescents on sexuality; c) we assessed the role of one specific structural factor: education (literature review and analysis of existing datasets); d) we assessed the theoretical underpinnings of existing HIV prevention interventions for young people in sub-Saharan Africa (literature review). Based on these studies, we discuss two main reasons for the observed limited effectiveness: factors associated with the intervention (strong focus on cognitions and moral, and implementation issues), and with evaluation (design, power, indicators). Recommendations for improving interventions, evaluations and for further research are provided. Universa Press 2013 /pmc/articles/PMC3987367/ /pubmed/24753945 Text en Copyright: © 2013 Facts, Views & Vision http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle PhD Summary
Michielsen, K.
Limited effectiveness of HIV prevention for young people in sub-Saharan Africa: studying the role of intervention and evaluation
title Limited effectiveness of HIV prevention for young people in sub-Saharan Africa: studying the role of intervention and evaluation
title_full Limited effectiveness of HIV prevention for young people in sub-Saharan Africa: studying the role of intervention and evaluation
title_fullStr Limited effectiveness of HIV prevention for young people in sub-Saharan Africa: studying the role of intervention and evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Limited effectiveness of HIV prevention for young people in sub-Saharan Africa: studying the role of intervention and evaluation
title_short Limited effectiveness of HIV prevention for young people in sub-Saharan Africa: studying the role of intervention and evaluation
title_sort limited effectiveness of hiv prevention for young people in sub-saharan africa: studying the role of intervention and evaluation
topic PhD Summary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3987367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24753945
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