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通过加速实现联合国可持续发展目标,改善艾滋病毒感染者青少年的生活:一项前瞻性队列研究。

Improving lives by accelerating progress towards the UN Sustainable Development Goals for adolescents living with HIV: a prospective cohort study.

机构信息

Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.

Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; Medical Research Council Development Pathways to Health Research Unit, School of Clinical Medicine, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.

出版信息

Lancet Child Adolesc Health. 2019 Apr;3(4):245-254. doi: 10.1016/S2352-4642(19)30033-1.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) face major challenges in achieving the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for vulnerable adolescents. We aimed to test the UN Development Programme's proposed approach of development accelerators-provisions that lead to progress across multiple SDGs-and synergies between accelerators on achieving SDG-aligned targets in a highly vulnerable group of adolescents in South Africa.

METHODS

We did standardised interviews and extracted longitudinal data from clinical records at baseline (2014-15) and 18-month follow-up (2016-17) for adolescents aged 10-19 years living with HIV in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. We used standardised tools to measure 11 SDG-aligned targets-antiretroviral therapy adherence, good mental health, no substance use, HIV care retention, school enrolment, school progression, no sexual abuse, no high-risk sex, no violence perpetration, no community violence, and no emotional or physical abuse. We also assessed receipt at both baseline and follow-up of six hypothesised development accelerators-government cash transfers to households, safe schools (ie, without teacher or student violence), free schools, parenting support, free school meals, and support groups. Associations of all provisions with SDG-aligned targets were assessed jointly in a multivariate path model, controlling for baseline outcomes and sociodemographic and HIV-related covariates, and adjusted for multiple outcome testing. Cumulative effects were tested by marginal effects modelling.

FINDINGS

1063 (90%) of 1176 eligible adolescents were interviewed. Three provisions were shown to be development accelerators. Parenting support was associated with good mental health (odds ratio 2·13, 95% CI 1·43-3·15, p<0·0001), no high-risk sex (2·44, 1·45-5·03, p=0·005), no violence perpetration (2·59, 1·63-4·59, p<0·0001), no community violence (2·43, 1·65-3·86, p<0·0001), and no emotional or physical abuse (2·38, 1·65-3·76; p<0·0001). Cash transfers were associated with HIV care retention (1·87, 1·15-3·02, p=0·010), school progression (2·05, 1·33-3·24, p=0·003), and no emotional or physical abuse (1·76, 1·12-3·02, p=0·025). Safe schools were associated with good mental health (1·74, 1·30-2·34, p<0·0001), school progression (1·57, 1·17-2·13, p=0·004), no violence perpetration (2·02, 1·45-2·91, p<0·0001), no community violence (1·81, 1·30-2·55, p<0·0001), and no emotional or physical abuse (2·20, 1·58-3·17, p<0·0001). For five of 11 SDG-aligned targets, a combination of two or more accelerators showed cumulative positive associations, suggesting accelerator synergies of combination provisions. For example, the fitted probability of adolescents reporting no emotional or physical abuse (SDG 16.2) with no safe schools, cash transfers, or parenting support was 0·25 (0·16-0·34). With cash transfer alone it was 0·37 (0·33-0·42), with safe school alone 0·42 (0·30-0·55), and with parenting support alone 0·44 (0·30-0·59). With all three development accelerators combined, the probability of adolescents reporting no emotional or physical abuse was 0·76 (0·67-0·84). After correcting for multiple tests, four of the SDG-aligned targets (antiretroviral therapy adherence, no substance use, school enrolment, and no sexual abuse) were not associated with any hypothesised accelerators.

INTERPRETATION

The findings suggest the UN's accelerator approach for this high-risk adolescent population has policy and potential financing usefulness. Services that simultaneously promote several SDG targets, or combine to support particular targets, might be important to meet not only health-related targets, but also to ensure that adolescents in LMICs thrive within a new development framework.

FUNDING

Nuffield Foundation, UK Research and Innovation Global Challenges Research Fund, UKAID, Janssen Pharmaceutica, International AIDS Society, John Fell Fund, European Research Council, Economic and Social Research Council, Philip Leverhulme Trust, and UNICEF.

摘要

背景

中低收入国家(LMICs)在实现联合国针对弱势青少年的可持续发展目标(SDGs)方面面临重大挑战。我们旨在检验联合国开发计划署(UNDP)提出的发展加速器方法——即能够促进多个 SDG 取得进展的规定,以及这些加速器之间的协同作用,以实现南非一个高度弱势青少年群体的 SDG 目标。

方法

我们对居住在南非东开普省的 10-19 岁艾滋病毒感染者进行了标准访谈,并从临床记录中提取了基线(2014-15 年)和 18 个月随访(2016-17 年)的数据。我们使用标准工具来衡量 11 个与 SDG 一致的目标——抗逆转录病毒治疗的依从性、良好的心理健康、无物质使用、艾滋病毒护理的保留率、入学、学业进展、无性虐待、无高危性行为、无暴力侵害、无社区暴力和无情感或身体虐待。我们还评估了在基线和随访时,六类假设的发展加速器(家庭现金转移、安全学校(即无教师或学生暴力)、免费学校、家长支持、免费校餐和支持小组)的获得情况。通过多变量路径模型联合评估所有规定与 SDG 目标的关联,控制基线结果和社会人口学及艾滋病毒相关因素,并进行多次检验校正。通过边际效应建模测试累积效应。

结果

1176 名符合条件的青少年中,有 1063 名(90%)接受了访谈。有三项规定被证明是发展加速器。家长支持与良好的心理健康(比值比 2.13,95%CI 1.43-3.15,p<0.0001)、无高危性行为(2.44,1.45-5.03,p=0.005)、无暴力侵害(2.59,1.63-4.59,p<0.0001)、无社区暴力(2.43,1.65-3.86,p<0.0001)和无情感或身体虐待(2.38,1.65-3.76;p<0.0001)有关。现金转移与艾滋病毒护理保留率(1.87,1.15-3.02,p=0.010)、学业进展(2.05,1.33-3.24,p=0.003)和无情感或身体虐待(1.76,1.12-3.02,p=0.025)有关。安全学校与良好的心理健康(1.74,1.30-2.34,p<0.0001)、学业进展(1.57,1.17-2.13,p=0.004)、无暴力侵害(2.02,1.45-2.91,p<0.0001)、无社区暴力(1.81,1.30-2.55,p<0.0001)和无情感或身体虐待(2.20,1.58-3.17,p<0.0001)有关。对于与 11 个 SDG 目标一致的五个目标,两个或更多加速器的组合显示出累积的积极关联,表明加速器的组合规定具有协同作用。例如,报告没有情感或身体虐待(SDG 16.2)且没有安全学校、现金转移或家长支持的青少年的拟合概率为 0.25(0.16-0.34)。单独使用现金转移的概率为 0.37(0.33-0.42),单独使用安全学校的概率为 0.42(0.30-0.55),单独使用家长支持的概率为 0.44(0.30-0.59)。当所有三个发展加速器结合使用时,报告没有情感或身体虐待的青少年的概率为 0.76(0.67-0.84)。在进行多次检验校正后,四个与 SDG 一致的目标(抗逆转录病毒治疗的依从性、无物质使用、入学和无性虐待)与任何假设的加速器都没有关联。

结论

这些发现表明,联合国针对这一高危青少年群体的加速方法在政策和潜在融资方面具有实用性。同时促进多个 SDG 目标的服务,或结合起来支持特定目标的服务,可能不仅对实现与健康相关的目标很重要,而且对确保中低收入国家的青少年在新的发展框架内茁壮成长也很重要。

资助

Nuffield 基金会、英国研究与创新全球挑战研究基金、英国国际发展部、杨森制药公司、国际艾滋病协会、约翰·费尔基金会、欧洲研究理事会、经济和社会研究理事会、菲利普·勒弗尔休姆信托基金和联合国儿童基金会。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/034d/6559259/cdc55f304795/gr1.jpg

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