Nxumalo Vuyiswa, Nxumalo Siyabonga, Smit Theresa, Khoza Thandeka, Mdaba Fikile, Khumalo Thulile, Cislaghi Beniamino, McGrath Nuala, Seeley Janet, Shahmanesh Maryam, Harling Guy
Africa Health Research Institute, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
Department of Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, WC1H 9SH, UK.
Wellcome Open Res. 2022 May 26;7:164. doi: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.17896.1. eCollection 2022.
: Sexual behaviour and sexually transmitted infections are strongly affected by social connections, and interventions are often adapted more readily when diffused through social networks. However, evidence on how young people acquire ideas and change behaviour through the influence of important social contacts is not well understood in high-HIV-prevalence settings, with the result that past peer-led HIV-prevention interventions have had limited success. : We therefore designed a cohort study (named Sixhumene or 'we are connected') to follow young people in three rural and small-town communities in uMkhanyakude district, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, and the people that these youth identify as important in their lives. We will interview them five times over three years, at each visit collecting information on their socioeconomic, social and sexual health lives, and testing them for HIV and herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV-2). We will use this information to understand how these young people's sexual health decisions are formed. This will include evaluating how poor sexual health outcomes are correlated across social networks, how youth mimic the attitudes and behaviours of those around them, who is at greatest risk of acquiring HIV and HSV-2, and who might be most influential within communities and thus best able to promote protective interventions. : The information gathered through this study will allow us to describe social connection and influence spread through these real-world social networks, and how this leads to sexual health outcomes. Sixhumene will provide vital inputs for mathematical models of communities and spreading processes, as well as inform the development of effective interventions to protect the sexual health of community members through appropriate targeting with optimised messaging requiring fewer resources.
性行为和性传播感染受到社会关系的强烈影响,当通过社交网络传播时,干预措施往往更容易被采用。然而,在艾滋病毒高流行地区,关于年轻人如何通过重要社会联系人的影响获取观念并改变行为的证据尚不明确,导致过去由同龄人主导的艾滋病毒预防干预措施成效有限。
因此,我们设计了一项队列研究(名为Sixhumene或“我们相互关联”),对南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省乌姆卡尼亚库德区的三个农村和小镇社区的年轻人以及这些年轻人认为在他们生活中重要的人进行跟踪研究。我们将在三年时间里对他们进行五次访谈,每次访谈收集他们的社会经济、社会和性健康生活信息,并对他们进行艾滋病毒和单纯疱疹病毒2(HSV - 2)检测。我们将利用这些信息来了解这些年轻人的性健康决策是如何形成的。这将包括评估不良性健康结果在社交网络中的相关性、年轻人如何模仿周围人的态度和行为、谁感染艾滋病毒和HSV - 2的风险最大,以及谁在社区中可能最具影响力,从而最有能力推动保护性干预措施。
通过这项研究收集的信息将使我们能够描述通过这些现实世界的社交网络传播的社会联系和影响,以及这如何导致性健康结果。Sixhumene将为社区和传播过程的数学模型提供重要输入,并为通过以优化信息进行适当定位、需要更少资源来保护社区成员性健康的有效干预措施的制定提供信息。