Department of Sociology and Population Research Institute, Penn State University, University Park, PA, USA.
Glob Public Health. 2011;6(1):41-55. doi: 10.1080/17441692.2010.486764.
The AIDS-related activities of religious leaders in Africa extend far beyond preaching about sexual mortality. This study aims to quantify the involvement of religious leaders in the fight against AIDS and to identify key predictors of the types of prevention strategies they promote. Using data from a random sample of Christian and Muslim leaders in Malawi, I use logistic regression to predict six types of AIDS activities, which correspond to three distinct types: formal messages (i.e., preaching), pragmatic interventions (monitoring the sexual behaviour of members and advising divorce to avoid infection) and the promotion of biomedical prevention strategies (promoting condom use and testing for HIV). Preaching about AIDS is the most common prevention activity and promoting condom use is the least; sizable proportions of clergy promote testing and engage in pragmatic interventions. Denominational patterns in the type of engagement are weak and inconsistent. However, inquiries into the motivation for leaders' activities show that discussions with members about AIDS are the most consistent predictor, suggesting that religious leaders' engagement with HIV prevention is primarily a demand-driven phenomenon.
非洲宗教领袖的艾滋病相关活动远远超出了宣讲性行为致死的范畴。本研究旨在量化宗教领袖在防治艾滋病方面的参与程度,并确定他们所倡导的预防策略类型的关键预测因素。本研究使用马拉维基督教和穆斯林领袖的随机样本数据,采用逻辑回归来预测六种艾滋病活动类型,这些类型对应三种不同的类型:正式信息(即布道)、务实干预(监测成员的性行为并建议离婚以避免感染)和促进生物医学预防策略(推广避孕套使用和艾滋病毒检测)。布道是最常见的预防活动,而推广避孕套使用则最少;相当比例的神职人员提倡检测和采取务实干预措施。参与类型的教派模式较弱且不一致。然而,对领导人活动动机的调查表明,与成员讨论艾滋病是最一致的预测因素,这表明宗教领袖参与艾滋病毒预防主要是一种需求驱动的现象。