AIDS and Society Research Unit, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
J Int AIDS Soc. 2018 Feb;21 Suppl 1(Suppl Suppl 1). doi: 10.1002/jia2.25057.
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) commit to strengthening collaborations between governments and civil society. Adolescents are among the key target populations for global development initiatives, but research studies and programmes rarely include their direct perspectives on how to promote health and wellbeing. This article explores how both the methods and the findings of participatory research provide insights into adolescents' aspirations across the domains of health and social development. It investigates how adolescents conceive of health and social services as interconnected, and how this reflects the multisectoral objectives of the SDGs.
This research was conducted within a longitudinal, mixed-methods study of HIV-positive adolescents (n = 80 qualitative participants, n = 1060 quantitative interviews). Between November 2013 and February 2014, a participatory exercise - the "dream clinic" - was piloted with 25 adolescents in South Africa's Eastern Cape. Key themes were identified based on the insights shared by participants, and through visual and thematic analysis. These findings were explored through a second participatory exercise, "Yummy or crummy? You are the Mzantsi Wakho masterchef !," conducted in January 2016. Findings are described in relation to emerging quantitative results.
Mixed methods explored associations between access to food, medicines, clean water and sanitation in HIV-positive adolescents' aspirations for development. The exercises produced practicable recommendations for innovations in development, based on associations between healthcare, food security, clean water and sanitation, while illustrating the value of partnership and collaboration (the objective of SDG17). Findings capture strong interlinkages between SDGs 2, 3 and 6 - confirming the importance of specific SDGs for HIV-positive adolescents. Study results informed the objectives of South Africa's National and Adolescent and Youth Health Policy (2017).
Participatory research may be used to leverage the perspectives and experiences of adolescents. The methods described here provide potential for co-design and implementation of developmental initiatives to fulfil the ambitious mandate of the SDGs. They may also create new opportunities to strengthen the engagement of adolescents in policy and programming.
可持续发展目标(SDGs)致力于加强政府与民间社会之间的合作。青少年是全球发展倡议的关键目标人群之一,但研究和项目很少包括他们对促进健康和幸福的直接看法。本文探讨了参与式研究的方法和结果如何深入了解青少年在健康和社会发展领域的愿望。它调查了青少年如何将健康和社会服务视为相互关联的,以及这如何反映了可持续发展目标的多部门目标。
本研究是在对艾滋病毒阳性青少年(80 名定性参与者,1060 名定量访谈)进行的一项纵向混合方法研究中进行的。2013 年 11 月至 2014 年 2 月,在南非东开普省进行了一项名为“梦想诊所”的参与式试验,有 25 名青少年参加。基于参与者分享的见解,并通过视觉和主题分析,确定了主要主题。这些发现通过 2016 年 1 月进行的第二项参与式活动“Yummy or crummy? You are the Mzantsi Wakho masterchef!”进行了探讨。研究结果与新兴的定量结果相关联。
混合方法探讨了艾滋病毒阳性青少年对发展的期望中获得食物、药品、清洁水和卫生设施之间的关联。这些活动基于医疗保健、食品安全、清洁水和卫生设施之间的关联,提出了发展创新的切实可行的建议,同时说明了伙伴关系和合作的价值(可持续发展目标 17 的目标)。研究结果捕捉到了可持续发展目标 2、3 和 6 之间的强烈相互联系,这证实了特定可持续发展目标对艾滋病毒阳性青少年的重要性。研究结果为南非的国家和青少年与青年健康政策(2017 年)提供了信息。
参与式研究可用于利用青少年的观点和经验。这里描述的方法为满足可持续发展目标的宏伟任务提供了共同设计和实施发展举措的潜力。它们还可能为加强青少年参与政策和规划创造新的机会。