Centre for Global Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Medical Rehabilitation Building, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2011 Jun 24;11:496. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-496.
Stepping Stones training aims to help individuals explore sexual relationships and recognize gender inequalities, the structural drivers of the HIV epidemic, in order to understand risk behaviours and to seek solutions to factors that increase HIV vulnerability. Despite earlier studies suggesting the success of Stepping Stones, little data exist to show diffusion to trainees' social networks or the wider community.
A mixed-methods evaluation of this approach was undertaken using in-depth interviews of trainees and friends, and polling booth surveys in 20 villages where Stepping Stones training took place and in another 20 villages with no Stepping Stones intervention.
The interview respondents and their friends reported significant changes in their relationships after training, and benefit from discussion of gender, sexuality, condom use and HIV vulnerability issues. However, though diffusion of this knowledge at the level of personal contacts was strong, the evaluation revealed that diffusion to the community level was limited.
The qualitative part of this study reflects other studies in different settings, in that SS participants gained immensely from the training. Wider behaviour change is a challenging goal that many programmes fail to attain, with most interventions too limited in scope and intensity to produce larger community effects. This may have contributed to the fact that we observed few differences between interventions and non-intervention villages in this study. However, it is also possible that we had excessive expectations of individual change at the community level, and that it might have been more appropriate to have had broader community level rather than individual behavioural change indicators. We suggest that SS could be enhanced by efforts to better engage existing community opinion leaders, to empower and train participants as community change agents, and to support the development of village-level action plans that combat sexual stereotyping and risky behaviours that lead to unhealthy sexual relationships.
踏脚石培训旨在帮助个人探索性关系,并认识到导致艾滋病毒流行的性别不平等和结构性驱动因素,以便了解风险行为,并寻求解决增加艾滋病毒脆弱性的因素的办法。尽管早期研究表明踏脚石培训取得了成功,但很少有数据表明培训已经扩散到学员的社交网络或更广泛的社区。
采用深入访谈学员及其朋友,并在开展踏脚石培训的 20 个村庄和没有踏脚石干预的 20 个村庄进行投票亭调查,对这种方法进行了混合方法评价。
访谈受访者及其朋友报告说,培训后他们的关系发生了重大变化,并且从性别、性、避孕套使用和艾滋病毒脆弱性问题的讨论中受益。然而,尽管这种知识在个人接触层面上得到了广泛传播,但评估结果表明,向社区层面的传播是有限的。
这项研究的定性部分反映了其他不同环境中的研究结果,即踏脚石培训参与者从中受益匪浅。更广泛的行为改变是一个具有挑战性的目标,许多方案都未能实现,大多数干预措施的范围和强度有限,无法产生更大的社区影响。这可能是我们在这项研究中观察到干预村庄和非干预村庄之间几乎没有差异的原因。然而,也有可能我们对社区层面的个人变化期望过高,而更适合采用更广泛的社区层面而不是个人行为变化指标。我们建议,通过努力更好地让现有的社区意见领袖参与进来,赋予学员作为社区变革推动者的权力并对其进行培训,并支持制定村庄一级行动计划,打击导致不健康性关系的性别定型观念和危险行为,以此来增强踏脚石培训。