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Negotiating access and buy-in from communities in the context of a South African combination HIV prevention intervention for adolescent girls and young women

Background: In response to the persistently high incidence of HIV in adolescent girls and young women in South Africa, the Global Fund invested in a combination HIV prevention intervention aimed at adolescent girls and young women in 10 high priority districts. The HERStory study evaluated the combi...

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Main Author: Armien, Rizqa
Other Authors: Duby, Zoe
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Health and Family Medicine 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Armien, Rizqa
author2 Duby, Zoe
author_browse Armien, Rizqa
Duby, Zoe
author_facet Duby, Zoe
Armien, Rizqa
author_sort Armien, Rizqa
collection Thesis
description Background: In response to the persistently high incidence of HIV in adolescent girls and young women in South Africa, the Global Fund invested in a combination HIV prevention intervention aimed at adolescent girls and young women in 10 high priority districts. The HERStory study evaluated the combination HIV prevention intervention after two years of implementation. Using the findings of the HERStory evaluation, this study aims to contribute towards the literature related to understanding factors related to successfully accessing communities and gaining community buy-in or support for community based interventions. The HERStory study explored the identification of the gaps and challenges in the intervention components and the intervention implementation to be able to revise and improve the intervention and its implementation. Methods: In-depth interviews and focus group discussions with community leaders, program implementers and intervention facilitators were conducted. The data consisted of 32 transcripts; a subset of the qualitative data collected for the HERStory evaluation. The analysis for this study sought to better understand the barriers and facilitators of community access and the importance of community buy-in using the HERStory evaluation. Thematic analysis of the data was conducted, supported by Nvivo 12 qualitative data analysis software. Results: The main themes of this secondary analysis were 1) the complexity of negotiating access to communities through key stakeholders, 2) challenges to gaining buy-in, and 3) facilitators and barriers to community based intervention implementation. There were clear facilitators to community access and intervention buy-in such as creating clear communication lines between stakeholders and scheduling regular meetings. Delayed or rushed community engagement resulted in misunderstandings and was identified as barriers to community access and intervention buy-in. Conclusion: Quality community engagement was essential in the facilitation of access and intervention buy-in to promote successful intervention implementation. Recommendations for future interventions include planning enough time for community engagement throughout the intervention including the design phase and establishing clear and effective communication channels between intervention implementers and community stakeholders.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32446 Negotiating access and buy-in from communities in the context of a South African combination HIV prevention intervention for adolescent girls and young women Armien, Rizqa Duby, Zoe Colvin, Christopher Public Health Background: In response to the persistently high incidence of HIV in adolescent girls and young women in South Africa, the Global Fund invested in a combination HIV prevention intervention aimed at adolescent girls and young women in 10 high priority districts. The HERStory study evaluated the combination HIV prevention intervention after two years of implementation. Using the findings of the HERStory evaluation, this study aims to contribute towards the literature related to understanding factors related to successfully accessing communities and gaining community buy-in or support for community based interventions. The HERStory study explored the identification of the gaps and challenges in the intervention components and the intervention implementation to be able to revise and improve the intervention and its implementation. Methods: In-depth interviews and focus group discussions with community leaders, program implementers and intervention facilitators were conducted. The data consisted of 32 transcripts; a subset of the qualitative data collected for the HERStory evaluation. The analysis for this study sought to better understand the barriers and facilitators of community access and the importance of community buy-in using the HERStory evaluation. Thematic analysis of the data was conducted, supported by Nvivo 12 qualitative data analysis software. Results: The main themes of this secondary analysis were 1) the complexity of negotiating access to communities through key stakeholders, 2) challenges to gaining buy-in, and 3) facilitators and barriers to community based intervention implementation. There were clear facilitators to community access and intervention buy-in such as creating clear communication lines between stakeholders and scheduling regular meetings. Delayed or rushed community engagement resulted in misunderstandings and was identified as barriers to community access and intervention buy-in. Conclusion: Quality community engagement was essential in the facilitation of access and intervention buy-in to promote successful intervention implementation. Recommendations for future interventions include planning enough time for community engagement throughout the intervention including the design phase and establishing clear and effective communication channels between intervention implementers and community stakeholders. 2020-12-23T06:13:12Z 2020-12-23T06:13:12Z 2020 2020-12-23T05:47:58Z Master Thesis Masters MPH http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32446 eng application/pdf Department of Public Health and Family Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Public Health
Armien, Rizqa
Negotiating access and buy-in from communities in the context of a South African combination HIV prevention intervention for adolescent girls and young women
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Negotiating access and buy-in from communities in the context of a South African combination HIV prevention intervention for adolescent girls and young women
title_full Negotiating access and buy-in from communities in the context of a South African combination HIV prevention intervention for adolescent girls and young women
title_fullStr Negotiating access and buy-in from communities in the context of a South African combination HIV prevention intervention for adolescent girls and young women
title_full_unstemmed Negotiating access and buy-in from communities in the context of a South African combination HIV prevention intervention for adolescent girls and young women
title_short Negotiating access and buy-in from communities in the context of a South African combination HIV prevention intervention for adolescent girls and young women
title_sort negotiating access and buy in from communities in the context of a south african combination hiv prevention intervention for adolescent girls and young women
topic Public Health
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32446
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