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证据与差距地图报告:在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)加强青少年女孩和年轻女性(AGYW)中艾滋病毒预防及研究的社会和行为改变沟通(SBCC)干预措施

Evidence and gap map report: Social and Behavior Change Communication (SBCC) interventions for strengthening HIV prevention and research among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).

作者信息

Bose Devi Leena, Hundal Anhad, Singh Sabina, Singh Shweta, Seth Kuhika, Hadi Saif Ul, Saran Ashrita, Joseph Jessy, Goyal Kriti, Salve Solomon

机构信息

IAVI New Delhi India.

Campbell South Asia New Delhi India.

出版信息

Campbell Syst Rev. 2023 Jan 10;19(1):e1297. doi: 10.1002/cl2.1297. eCollection 2023 Mar.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW), aged 15-24 years, are disproportionately affected by HIV and other sexual and reproductive health (SRH) risks due to varying social, cultural, and economic factors that affect their choices and shape their knowledge, understanding, and practices with regard to their health. Socio-Behavioral Change Communication (SBCC) interventions targeted at strengthening the capabilities of individuals and their networks have supported the demand and uptake of prevention services and participation in biomedical research. However, despite growing global recognition of the domain, high-quality evidence on the effectiveness of SBCC remains scattered. This evidence and gap map (EGM) report characterizes the evidence base on SBCC interventions for strengthening HIV Prevention and Research among AGYW in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), identifying evidence gaps and outlining the scope of future research and program design.

OBJECTIVES

The objectives of the proposed EGM are to: (a) identify and map existing EGMs in the use of diverse SBCC strategies to strengthen the adoption of HIV prevention measures and participation in research among AGYW in LMICs and (b) identify areas where more interventions and evidence are needed to inform the design of future SBCC strategies and programs for AGYW engagement in HIV prevention and research.

METHODS

This EGM is based on a comprehensive search of systematic reviews and impact evaluations corresponding to a range of interventions and outcomes-aimed at engaging AGYW in HIV prevention and research - that were published in LMICs from January 2000 to April 2021. Based on guidance for producing a Campbell Collaboration EGM, the intervention and outcome framework was designed in consultation with a group of experts. These interventions were categorized across four broad intervention themes: mass-media, community-based, interpersonal, and Information Communication and Technology (ICT)/Digital Media-based interventions. They were further sub-categorized into 15 intervention categories. Included studies looked at 23 unique behavioral and health outcomes such as knowledge attitude and skills, relationship dynamics, household dynamics, health care services, and health outcomes and research engagement. The EGM is presented as a matrix in which the rows are intervention categories/sub-categories, and the columns are outcome domains/subdomains. Each cell is mapped to an intervention targeted at outcomes. Additional filters like region, country, study design, age group, funding agency, influencers, population group, publication status, study confidence, setting, and year of publication have been added.

SELECTION CRITERIA

To be eligible, studies must have tested the effectiveness of SBCC interventions at engaging AGYW in LMICs in HIV prevention and research. The study sample must have consisted of AGYW between the ages of 15-24, as defined by UNAIDS. Both experimental (random assignment) and quasi-experimental studies that included a comparison group were eligible. Relevant outcomes included those at the individual, influencer, and institutional levels, along with those targeting research engagement and prevention-related outcomes.

RESULTS

This EGM comprises 415 impact evaluations and 43 systematic reviews. Interventions like peer-led interactions, counseling, and community dialogues were the most dominant intervention sub-types. Despite increased digital penetration use of media and technology-driven interventions are relatively less studied. Most of the interventions were delivered by peers, health care providers, and educators, largely in school-based settings, and in many cases are part of sex-education curricula. Evidence across geographies was mostly concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa (70%). Most measured outcomes focused on disease-related knowledge dissemination and enhancing awareness of available prevention options/strategies. These included messaging around consistent condom use, limiting sexual partners, routine testing, and awareness. Very few studies were able to include psychographic, social, and contextual factors influencing AGYW health behaviors and decisions, especially those measuring the impact of social and gender norms, relationship dynamics, and household dynamics-related outcomes. Outcomes related to engagement in the research were least studied.

CONCLUSION

This EGM highlights that evidence is heavily concentrated within the awareness-intent spectrum of behavior change and gets lean for outcomes situated within the intent-action and the action-habit formation spectrum of the behavior change continuum. Most of the evidence was concentrated on increasing awareness, knowledge, and building risk perception around SRH domains, however, fewer studies focused on strengthening the agency and self-efficacy of individuals. Similarly, evidence on extrinsic factors-such as strengthening social and community norms, relationships, and household dynamics-that determine individual thought and action such as negotiation and life skills were also found to be less populated. Few studies explore the effectiveness of these interventions across diverse AGYW identities, like pregnant women and new mothers, sex workers, and people living with HIV, leading to limited understanding of the use of these interventions across multiple user segments including key influencers such as young men, partners, families, religious leaders, and community elders was relatively low. There is a need for better quality evidence that accounts for the diversity of experiences within these populations to understand what interventions work, for whom, and toward what outcome. Further, the evidence for use of digital and mass-media tools remains poorly populated. Given the increasing penetration of these tools and growing media literacy on one end, with widening gender-based gaps on the other, it is imperative to gather more high-quality evidence on their effectiveness. Timely evidence generation can help leverage these platforms appropriately and enable intervention designs that are responsive to changing communication ecologies of AGYW. SBCC can play a critical role in helping researchers meaningfully engage and collaborate with communities as equal stakeholders, however, this remains poorly evidenced and calls for investigation and investment. A full list of abbreviations and acronyms are available in Supporting Information: Appendix F.

摘要

背景

15至24岁的青春期女孩和年轻女性(AGYW)受艾滋病毒以及其他性与生殖健康(SRH)风险的影响尤为严重,这是由于各种社会、文化和经济因素影响了她们的选择,并塑造了她们在健康方面的知识、理解和行为。针对增强个人及其社交网络能力的社会行为改变沟通(SBCC)干预措施,推动了预防服务的需求和采用,并促进了生物医学研究的参与。然而,尽管全球对该领域的认识不断提高,但关于SBCC有效性的高质量证据仍然零散。这份证据与差距图谱(EGM)报告描述了在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)针对增强AGYW的艾滋病毒预防和研究开展的SBCC干预措施的证据基础,识别了证据差距,并概述了未来研究和项目设计的范围。

目标

拟议的EGM的目标是:(a)识别并绘制在使用各种SBCC策略以增强LMICs中AGYW对艾滋病毒预防措施的采用和研究参与方面现有的EGM;(b)识别需要更多干预措施和证据的领域,以为未来针对AGYW参与艾滋病毒预防和研究的SBCC策略和项目设计提供信息。

方法

本EGM基于对2000年1月至2021年4月在LMICs发表的一系列旨在促使AGYW参与艾滋病毒预防和研究的干预措施及结果的系统评价和影响评估进行全面检索。根据制作坎贝尔协作组织EGM的指南,与一组专家协商设计了干预措施和结果框架。这些干预措施分为四个广泛的干预主题:大众媒体、基于社区、人际和基于信息通信技术(ICT)/数字媒体的干预措施。它们进一步细分为15个干预类别。纳入的研究考察了23种独特的行为和健康结果,如知识、态度和技能、关系动态、家庭动态、医疗保健服务以及健康结果和研究参与度。EGM以矩阵形式呈现,其中行是干预类别/子类别,列是结果领域/子领域。每个单元格对应一项针对结果的干预措施。还添加了其他筛选条件,如地区、国家、研究设计、年龄组、资助机构、有影响力的人、人群组、出版状态、研究可信度、环境和出版年份。

入选标准

符合条件的研究必须测试了SBCC干预措施在促使LMICs中的AGYW参与艾滋病毒预防和研究方面的有效性。研究样本必须由联合国艾滋病规划署定义的15至24岁的AGYW组成。包括比较组的实验性(随机分配)和准实验性研究均符合条件。相关结果包括个人、有影响力的人和机构层面的结果,以及针对研究参与和与预防相关结果的结果。

结果

本EGM包括415项影响评估和43项系统评价。同伴主导的互动、咨询和社区对话等干预措施是最主要的干预子类型。尽管数字普及率有所提高,但对媒体和技术驱动的干预措施的研究相对较少。大多数干预措施由同伴、医疗保健提供者和教育工作者实施,主要是在学校环境中,并且在许多情况下是性教育课程的一部分。各地的证据大多集中在撒哈拉以南非洲(70%)。大多数测量的结果集中在与疾病相关的知识传播以及提高对可用预防选项/策略的认识上。这些包括关于持续使用避孕套、限制性伴侣、定期检测和提高认识的信息。很少有研究能够纳入影响AGYW健康行为和决策的心理、社会和背景因素,特别是那些测量社会和性别规范、关系动态以及家庭动态相关结果影响的研究。与参与研究相关的结果研究最少。

结论

本EGM强调,证据严重集中在行为改变的意识 - 意图范围内,而对于行为改变连续体中意图 - 行动和行动 - 习惯形成范围内的结果则较少。大多数证据集中在提高对性与生殖健康领域的认识、知识以及建立风险认知上,然而,较少有研究关注增强个人的能力和自我效能感。同样,关于外在因素的证据,如强化社会和社区规范、关系以及家庭动态等决定个人思维和行动(如谈判和生活技能)的因素也较少。很少有研究探讨这些干预措施在不同AGYW身份群体(如孕妇和新妈妈、性工作者以及艾滋病毒感染者)中的有效性,导致对这些干预措施在包括年轻男性、伴侣、家庭、宗教领袖和社区长者等关键影响者在内的多个用户群体中的使用了解有限。需要有更好质量的证据来考虑这些人群中经历的多样性,以了解哪些干预措施有效、对谁有效以及会产生什么结果。此外,关于数字和大众媒体工具使用的证据仍然很少。鉴于这些工具的普及率不断提高,一方面媒体素养不断提升,另一方面基于性别的差距不断扩大,必须收集更多关于其有效性的高质量证据。及时生成证据有助于适当地利用这些平台,并实现能够响应AGYW不断变化的传播生态的干预设计。SBCC在帮助研究人员作为平等的利益相关者与社区进行有意义的互动和合作方面可以发挥关键作用,然而,这方面的证据仍然很少,需要进行调查和投资。支持信息附录F中提供了完整的缩写和首字母缩略词列表。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/a172/9831290/d77dff3440a6/CL2-19-e1297-g004.jpg

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