Department of Family Medicine, McGill University, 5858 chemin de la Côte-des-Neiges, 3rd floor, Montreal, Quebec, H3S 1Z1, Canada.
Centro de Investigación de Enfermedades Tropicales (CIET), Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero, Acapulco, Mexico.
Int J Equity Health. 2019 Jan 18;18(1):12. doi: 10.1186/s12939-019-0911-8.
In Botswana, one fifth of the adult population is infected with HIV, with young women most at risk. Structural factors such as poverty, poor education, strong gender inequalities and gender violence render many young women unable to act on choices to protect themselves from HIV. A national trial is testing an intervention to assist young women to access government programs for returning to education, and improving livelihoods. Accessing marginalised young women (aged 16-29 and not in education, employment or training) through door-to-door recruitment has proved inefficient. We investigated social networks of young women to see if an approach based on an understanding of these networks could help with recruitment.
This mixed methods study used social network analysis to identify key young women in four communities (using in-degree centrality), and to describe the types of people that marginalised young women (n = 307) turn to for support (using descriptive statistics and then generalized linear mixed models to examine the support networks of sub-groups of participants). In discussion groups (n = 46 participants), the same young women helped explain results from the network analysis. We also tracked the recruitment method for each participant (door to door, peers, or key community informants).
Although we were not able to identify characteristics of the most central young women in networks, we found that marginalised young women went most often to other women, usually in the same community, and with children, especially if they had children themselves. Rural women were better connected with each other than women in urban areas, though there were isolated young women in all communities. Peer recruitment contributed most in rural areas; door-to-door recruitment contributed most in urban areas.
Since marginalised young women seek support from others like themselves, outreach programs could use networks of women to identify and engage those who most need help from government structural support programs. Methods that rely on social networks alone may be insufficient, and so a combination of approaches, including, for instance, peers, door-to-door recruitment, and key community informants, should be explored as a strategy for reaching marginalised young women for supportive interventions.
在博茨瓦纳,五分之一的成年人口感染了 HIV,而年轻女性面临的风险最大。贫困、教育水平低、严重的性别不平等和性别暴力等结构性因素,使得许多年轻女性无法采取行动保护自己免受 HIV 的侵害。一项全国性试验正在测试一种干预措施,以帮助年轻女性获得重返教育和改善生计的政府计划。通过挨家挨户招募来接触边缘化的年轻女性(年龄在 16-29 岁之间,未接受教育、就业或培训)已被证明效率低下。我们调查了年轻女性的社交网络,以了解基于对这些网络的理解的方法是否有助于招募。
这项混合方法研究使用社会网络分析来确定四个社区中具有关键影响力的年轻女性(使用入度中心性),并描述边缘化年轻女性(n=307)求助的支持人员类型(使用描述性统计和广义线性混合模型来检查参与者亚组的支持网络)。在讨论组(n=46 名参与者)中,同一批年轻女性帮助解释了网络分析的结果。我们还跟踪了每位参与者的招募方法(挨家挨户、同龄人或关键社区线人)。
尽管我们无法确定网络中最核心的年轻女性的特征,但我们发现边缘化的年轻女性最常求助于其他女性,通常是在同一社区,并且有孩子,尤其是她们自己有孩子的情况下。农村地区的女性彼此之间的联系比城市地区的女性更紧密,尽管所有社区都有孤立的年轻女性。同龄人招募在农村地区贡献最大;挨家挨户的招募在城市地区贡献最大。
由于边缘化的年轻女性寻求与自己相似的人提供支持,外展计划可以利用女性网络来识别和接触最需要政府结构性支持计划帮助的人。仅依靠社交网络的方法可能不够,因此应该探索多种方法,例如同龄人、挨家挨户的招募和关键社区线人,作为接触边缘化年轻女性以提供支持性干预的策略。