Kamo Norifumi, Carlson Mary, Brennan Robert T, Earls Felton
Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2008 Feb;98(2):201-4. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2007.113704. Epub 2008 Jan 2.
A community-based cluster randomized control trial in a medium-sized municipality in Tanzania was designed to increase local competence to control HIV/AIDS through actions initiated by children and adolescents aged 10 to 14 years. Representative groups from the 15 treatment communities reached mutual understanding about their objectives as health agents, prioritized their actions, and skillfully applied community drama ("skits") to impart knowledge about the social realities and the microbiology of HIV/AIDS. In independently conducted surveys of neighborhood residents, differences were found between adults who did and did not witness the skits in their beliefs about the efficacy of children as HIV/AIDS primary change agents.
在坦桑尼亚一个中等规模的城市开展了一项基于社区的整群随机对照试验,旨在通过10至14岁儿童和青少年发起的行动,提高当地控制艾滋病毒/艾滋病的能力。来自15个治疗社区的代表性群体就其作为健康促进者的目标达成了共识,对行动进行了优先排序,并巧妙地运用社区戏剧(“短剧”)来传授关于艾滋病毒/艾滋病的社会现实和微生物学知识。在对邻里居民独立进行的调查中发现,观看短剧和未观看短剧的成年人在对儿童作为艾滋病毒/艾滋病主要变革推动者的效力的看法上存在差异。