Cornish Flora, Priego-Hernandez Jacqueline, Campbell Catherine, Mburu Gitau, McLean Susie
Department of Methodology, The London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK.
AIDS Behav. 2014 Nov;18(11):2110-34. doi: 10.1007/s10461-014-0748-5.
While community mobilisation (CM) is increasingly advocated for HIV prevention, its impact on measurable outcomes has not been established. We performed a systematic review of the impact of CM within HIV prevention interventions (N = 20), on biomedical, behavioural and social outcomes. Among most at risk groups (particularly sex workers), the evidence is somewhat consistent, indicating a tendency for positive impact, with stronger results for behavioural and social outcomes than for biomedical ones. Among youth and general communities, the evidence remains inconclusive. Success appears to be enhanced by engaging groups with a strong collective identity and by simultaneously addressing the socio-political context. We suggest that the inconclusiveness of the findings reflects problems with the evidence, rather than indicating that CM is ineffective. We discuss weaknesses in the operationalization of CM, neglect of social context, and incompatibility between context-specific CM processes and the aspiration of review methodologies to provide simple, context-transcending answers.
虽然社区动员越来越多地被倡导用于预防艾滋病毒,但其对可衡量结果的影响尚未得到证实。我们对社区动员在艾滋病毒预防干预措施(N = 20)中对生物医学、行为和社会结果的影响进行了系统评价。在大多数高危人群(特别是性工作者)中,证据在一定程度上是一致的,表明有积极影响的趋势,行为和社会结果方面的结果比生物医学结果更强。在青年和普通社区中,证据仍然没有定论。通过让具有强烈集体认同感的群体参与以及同时解决社会政治背景问题,成功似乎会得到增强。我们认为,研究结果的不确定性反映了证据方面的问题,而不是表明社区动员无效。我们讨论了社区动员实施过程中的弱点、对社会背景的忽视,以及特定背景下的社区动员过程与综述方法提供简单、超越背景的答案的愿望之间的不兼容性。