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Combination prevention package of interventions for reducing vulnerability to HIV among adolescent girls and young women in Nigeria: An action research

BACKGROUND: Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in Nigeria are especially at risk of HIV in Nigeria. Their vulnerability to HIV is linked to multiple concurrent sexual relationships, transgenerational sex, and transactional sex, amongst other factors. These factors have sociocultural contexts th...

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Autores principales: Arije, Olujide, Udoh, Ekerette, Ijadunola, Kayode, Afolabi, Olusegun, Aransiola, Joshua, Omoregie, Godpower, Tomori-Adeleye, Oyebukola, Ukeme-Edet, Obiarairiuku, Fajemisin, Oluwole, Titus, Rachel, Onayade, Adedeji
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9847984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36652442
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279077
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author Arije, Olujide
Udoh, Ekerette
Ijadunola, Kayode
Afolabi, Olusegun
Aransiola, Joshua
Omoregie, Godpower
Tomori-Adeleye, Oyebukola
Ukeme-Edet, Obiarairiuku
Fajemisin, Oluwole
Titus, Rachel
Onayade, Adedeji
author_facet Arije, Olujide
Udoh, Ekerette
Ijadunola, Kayode
Afolabi, Olusegun
Aransiola, Joshua
Omoregie, Godpower
Tomori-Adeleye, Oyebukola
Ukeme-Edet, Obiarairiuku
Fajemisin, Oluwole
Titus, Rachel
Onayade, Adedeji
author_sort Arije, Olujide
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in Nigeria are especially at risk of HIV in Nigeria. Their vulnerability to HIV is linked to multiple concurrent sexual relationships, transgenerational sex, and transactional sex, amongst other factors. These factors have sociocultural contexts that vary across a multi-cultural country like Nigeria. The aim of this study was to use an innovative collaborative approach to develop a minimum HIV prevention package for AGYW which is responsive to sociocultural settings and based on combination HIV prevention. METHODS: We conducted action research to develop and implement actionable HIV prevention intervention models that address AGYW’s vulnerabilities to HIV in three Nigerian States and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja. The action research adopted the breakthrough series (BTS) collaborative, which accelerates improvement through mutual learning. The BTS implementation involved rapid Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles: an iterative process to plan and implement a basket of interventions. Problems or problematic situations, termed change topics, for which interventions could be carried out were identified in each study location. Using participatory approaches during a series of meetings called learning sessions, specific and innovative interventions, termed change ideas, were developed. These learning sessions were conducted with young women groups and other stakeholders. The change ideas were tested, studied, adapted, adopted, or discarded at each participating site. Exposure to and uptake of the implemented interventions was assessed in the study areas using a household survey with 4308 respondents, 53 focus group discussions, and 40 one-on-one interviews in intervention and control study sites. RESULTS: Five categories of interventions were collaboratively developed, namely: Parental communication; Peer to peer interventions; Facilitator-led interventions; Non-traditional outlets for condoms, and Social media-based interventions. A good reach of the interventions was demonstrated as 77.5% of respondents reported exposure to at least one type of intervention. Nearly half of the respondents reported being exposed to the parental communication interventions, while 45.1% reported being exposed to the youth facilitator-driven interventions. Social media interventions had the lowest penetration. Also, there was between 15 to 20 positive percentage point difference between intervention and control for the uptake of HIV testing, and between 5 to 9 positive percentage point difference for uptake of male condoms. These differences were statistically significant at p<0.001. CONCLUSIONS: Interventions developed through participatory approaches with young people and well-tailored to local realities can improve the acceptability and accessibility of programs that are able to reduce the risk of HIV infection among AGYW.
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spelling pubmed-98479842023-01-19 Combination prevention package of interventions for reducing vulnerability to HIV among adolescent girls and young women in Nigeria: An action research Arije, Olujide Udoh, Ekerette Ijadunola, Kayode Afolabi, Olusegun Aransiola, Joshua Omoregie, Godpower Tomori-Adeleye, Oyebukola Ukeme-Edet, Obiarairiuku Fajemisin, Oluwole Titus, Rachel Onayade, Adedeji PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in Nigeria are especially at risk of HIV in Nigeria. Their vulnerability to HIV is linked to multiple concurrent sexual relationships, transgenerational sex, and transactional sex, amongst other factors. These factors have sociocultural contexts that vary across a multi-cultural country like Nigeria. The aim of this study was to use an innovative collaborative approach to develop a minimum HIV prevention package for AGYW which is responsive to sociocultural settings and based on combination HIV prevention. METHODS: We conducted action research to develop and implement actionable HIV prevention intervention models that address AGYW’s vulnerabilities to HIV in three Nigerian States and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja. The action research adopted the breakthrough series (BTS) collaborative, which accelerates improvement through mutual learning. The BTS implementation involved rapid Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles: an iterative process to plan and implement a basket of interventions. Problems or problematic situations, termed change topics, for which interventions could be carried out were identified in each study location. Using participatory approaches during a series of meetings called learning sessions, specific and innovative interventions, termed change ideas, were developed. These learning sessions were conducted with young women groups and other stakeholders. The change ideas were tested, studied, adapted, adopted, or discarded at each participating site. Exposure to and uptake of the implemented interventions was assessed in the study areas using a household survey with 4308 respondents, 53 focus group discussions, and 40 one-on-one interviews in intervention and control study sites. RESULTS: Five categories of interventions were collaboratively developed, namely: Parental communication; Peer to peer interventions; Facilitator-led interventions; Non-traditional outlets for condoms, and Social media-based interventions. A good reach of the interventions was demonstrated as 77.5% of respondents reported exposure to at least one type of intervention. Nearly half of the respondents reported being exposed to the parental communication interventions, while 45.1% reported being exposed to the youth facilitator-driven interventions. Social media interventions had the lowest penetration. Also, there was between 15 to 20 positive percentage point difference between intervention and control for the uptake of HIV testing, and between 5 to 9 positive percentage point difference for uptake of male condoms. These differences were statistically significant at p<0.001. CONCLUSIONS: Interventions developed through participatory approaches with young people and well-tailored to local realities can improve the acceptability and accessibility of programs that are able to reduce the risk of HIV infection among AGYW. Public Library of Science 2023-01-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9847984/ /pubmed/36652442 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279077 Text en © 2023 Arije et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Arije, Olujide
Udoh, Ekerette
Ijadunola, Kayode
Afolabi, Olusegun
Aransiola, Joshua
Omoregie, Godpower
Tomori-Adeleye, Oyebukola
Ukeme-Edet, Obiarairiuku
Fajemisin, Oluwole
Titus, Rachel
Onayade, Adedeji
Combination prevention package of interventions for reducing vulnerability to HIV among adolescent girls and young women in Nigeria: An action research
title Combination prevention package of interventions for reducing vulnerability to HIV among adolescent girls and young women in Nigeria: An action research
title_full Combination prevention package of interventions for reducing vulnerability to HIV among adolescent girls and young women in Nigeria: An action research
title_fullStr Combination prevention package of interventions for reducing vulnerability to HIV among adolescent girls and young women in Nigeria: An action research
title_full_unstemmed Combination prevention package of interventions for reducing vulnerability to HIV among adolescent girls and young women in Nigeria: An action research
title_short Combination prevention package of interventions for reducing vulnerability to HIV among adolescent girls and young women in Nigeria: An action research
title_sort combination prevention package of interventions for reducing vulnerability to hiv among adolescent girls and young women in nigeria: an action research
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9847984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36652442
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279077
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