Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WC1E 7HT, UK.
Africa Health Research Institute, Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
BMC Public Health. 2019 Oct 30;19(1):1417. doi: 10.1186/s12889-019-7766-1.
The DREAMS Partnership is an ambitious effort to deliver combinations of biomedical, behavioural and structural interventions to reduce HIV incidence among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW). To inform multi-sectoral programming at scale, across diverse settings in Kenya and South Africa, we identified who the programme is reaching, with which interventions and in what combinations.
Randomly-selected cohorts of 606 AGYW aged 10-14 years and 1081 aged 15-22 years in Nairobi and 2184 AGYW aged 13-22 years in uMkhanyakude, KwaZulu-Natal, were enrolled in 2017, after ~ 1 year of DREAMS implementation. In Gem, western Kenya, population-wide cross-sectional survey data were collected during roll-out in 2016 (n = 1365 AGYW 15-22 years). We summarised awareness and invitation to participate in DREAMS, uptake of interventions categorised by the DREAMS core package, and uptake of a subset of 'primary' interventions. We stratified by age-group and setting, and compared across AGYW characteristics.
Awareness of DREAMS was higher among younger women (Nairobi: 89%v78%, aged 15-17v18-22 years; uMkhanyakude: 56%v31%, aged 13-17v18-22; and Gem: 28%v25%, aged 15-17v18-22, respectively). HIV testing was the most accessed intervention in Nairobi and Gem (77% and 85%, respectively), and school-based HIV prevention in uMkhanyakude (60%). Among those invited, participation in social asset building was > 50%; > 60% accessed ≥2 core package categories, but few accessed all primary interventions intended for their age-group. Parenting programmes and community mobilisation, including those intended for male partners, were accessed infrequently. In Nairobi and uMkhanyakude, AGYW were more likely to be invited to participate and accessed more categories if they were: aged < 18 years, in school and experienced socio-economic vulnerabilities. Those who had had sex, or a pregnancy, were less likely to be invited to participate but accessed more categories.
In representative population-based samples, awareness and uptake of DREAMS were high after 1 year of implementation. Evidence of 'layering' (receiving multiple interventions from the DREAMS core package), particularly among more socio-economically vulnerable AGYW, indicate that intervention packages can be implemented at scale, for intended recipients, in real-world contexts. Challenges remain for higher coverage and greater 'layering', including among older, out-of-school AGYW, and community-based programmes for families and men.
DREAMS 伙伴关系是一项雄心勃勃的努力,旨在提供生物医学、行为和结构干预措施的组合,以降低青少年女孩和年轻妇女(AGYW)的艾滋病毒感染率。为了在肯尼亚和南非不同环境下大规模提供多部门规划信息,我们确定了该项目的服务对象、干预措施以及组合方式。
2017 年,在 DREAMS 实施约 1 年后,内罗毕和夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省乌姆赫兰加德随机选择了 606 名 10-14 岁和 1081 名 15-22 岁的 AGYW 以及 2184 名 13-22 岁的 AGYW 参加了该项目。在西部肯尼亚的 Gem,2016 年开展项目时收集了全人群横断面调查数据(n=1365 名 15-22 岁的 AGYW)。我们总结了对 DREAMS 的认识和邀请参加、按 DREAMS 核心套餐分类的干预措施的参与情况以及一组“主要”干预措施的参与情况。我们按年龄组和地点进行分层,并比较了不同 AGYW 特征。
年轻女性对 DREAMS 的认识较高(内罗毕:89%比 78%,15-17 岁比 18-22 岁;乌姆赫兰加德:56%比 31%,13-17 岁比 18-22 岁;以及 Gem:28%比 25%,15-17 岁比 18-22 岁)。在内罗毕和 Gem,艾滋病毒检测是最常被使用的干预措施(分别为 77%和 85%),而在乌姆赫兰加德,以学校为基础的艾滋病毒预防措施(60%)最常被使用。在被邀请的人群中,参与社会资产建设的比例超过 50%;超过 60%的人参与了≥2 个核心套餐类别,但很少有人参与了所有针对其年龄组的主要干预措施。育儿计划和社区动员,包括针对男性伴侣的计划,很少被使用。在内罗毕和乌姆赫兰加德,如果 AGYW 年龄<18 岁、在校且面临社会经济脆弱性,她们更有可能被邀请参与并参与更多类别。有过性行为或怀孕的人不太可能被邀请参与,但参与的类别更多。
在具有代表性的基于人群的样本中,实施 1 年后,对 DREAMS 的认识和参与度很高。“分层”(从 DREAMS 核心套餐中获得多种干预措施)的证据,特别是在更具社会经济脆弱性的 AGYW 中,表明干预措施包可以在现实环境中按计划为目标接受者实施。在更高的覆盖率和更大的“分层”方面仍然存在挑战,包括年龄较大、失学的 AGYW 以及针对家庭和男性的社区方案。