Schenk Katie D
Population Council, Washington, DC, USA.
AIDS Care. 2009 Jul;21(7):918-42. doi: 10.1080/09540120802537831.
Children affected by HIV in their families and communities face multiple risks to their health, education and psychosocial wellbeing. Community interventions for children who have been orphaned or rendered vulnerable take many forms, including educational assistance, home-based care, legal protection and psychosocial support. Despite a recent influx of funding for programme implementation, there exists little evidence to inform policymakers about whether their investments are improving the lives of vulnerable children and meeting key benchmarks including the Millennium Development Goals. This paper reviews the current evidence base on evaluations of community interventions for orphans and vulnerable children (OVC) in high HIV-prevalence African settings, focusing on studies' methodologies. Sources reviewed include published research studies and evidence from the unpublished programmatic "grey literature" located through database and internet searches. A total of 21 studies, varying in scope and generalisability, were identified. Interventions reviewed address children's wellbeing through various strategies within their communities. Evaluation methodologies reflect quantitative and qualitative approaches, including surveys (with and without baseline or comparison data), costing studies, focus groups, interviews, case studies, and participatory review techniques. Varied study methodologies reflect diverse research questions, various intervention types, and the challenges associated with evaluating complex interventions; highlighting the need to broaden the research paradigm in order to build the evidence base by including quasi-experimental and process evaluation approaches, and seeking further insights through participatory qualitative methodologies and costing studies. Although findings overall indicate the value of community interventions in effecting measurable improvements in child and family wellbeing, the quality and rigour of evidence is varied. A strategic research agenda is urgently needed to inform resource allocation and programme management decisions. Immediate imperatives include building local technical capacity to conduct quantitative and qualitative evaluation research, and strengthening monitoring and evaluation systems to collect process and outcome data (including costing) on key support models. Donors and implementers must support the collection of sound empirical evidence to inform the development and scale-up of OVC programmes.
家庭和社区中受艾滋病毒影响的儿童在健康、教育及心理社会福祉方面面临多重风险。针对孤儿或易受伤害儿童的社区干预形式多样,包括教育援助、居家护理、法律保护及心理社会支持。尽管近期用于项目实施的资金有所增加,但几乎没有证据能让政策制定者了解他们的投资是否正在改善弱势儿童的生活,以及是否达到包括千年发展目标在内的关键基准。本文回顾了目前关于非洲艾滋病毒高流行地区孤儿和易受伤害儿童(OVC)社区干预评估的证据基础,重点关注研究方法。所查阅的资料来源包括已发表的研究以及通过数据库和互联网搜索找到的未发表的项目“灰色文献”中的证据。共识别出21项范围和普遍性各异的研究。所回顾的干预措施通过社区内的各种策略来解决儿童的福祉问题。评估方法反映了定量和定性方法,包括调查(有或无基线或对照数据)、成本研究、焦点小组、访谈、案例研究以及参与式审查技术。多样的研究方法反映了不同的研究问题、各种干预类型以及评估复杂干预措施所面临的挑战;这凸显了拓宽研究范式的必要性,以便通过纳入准实验和过程评估方法来建立证据基础,并通过参与式定性方法和成本研究寻求更多见解。尽管总体研究结果表明社区干预在切实改善儿童和家庭福祉方面具有价值,但证据的质量和严谨性参差不齐。迫切需要一个战略研究议程,为资源分配和项目管理决策提供依据。当务之急包括建设当地开展定量和定性评估研究的技术能力,以及加强监测和评估系统,以收集关键支持模式的过程和结果数据(包括成本)。捐助者和实施者必须支持收集可靠的实证证据,为OVC项目的制定和扩大规模提供依据。