Institute for Life Course Health Research, Department of Global Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Tygerberg, South Africa.
Department of Behavioral, Social, and Health Education Sciences, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Glob Health Sci Pract. 2023 Oct 30;11(5). doi: 10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00077.
Adolescent girls and young women in sub-Saharan Africa are at high risk of HIV, unintended pregnancy, and early motherhood. These intersecting risks can adversely affect their developmental trajectories and lifelong well-being. Because young mothers living with HIV in these settings experience high levels of stigma, shame, and isolation, tailored psychosocial intervention approaches for this group are critical yet unavailable. Enlisting young peer supporters may be a promising way to expand the reach of health services and enhance psychosocial well-being. To date, few peer-based interventions have targeted young mothers living with HIV. In 2019-2021, we codeveloped a peer-based, facility-embedded intervention package, Ask-Boost-Connect-Discuss (ABCD), with young peer supporters to address the psychosocial needs of young mothers living with HIV in Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia. We then analyzed programmatic data from ABCD to assess the feasibility of using young peers to deliver psychosocial support. Data sources included post-intervention interviews, focus groups, and written feedback from multiple stakeholders (participants, peer supporters, their supervisors, and clinic-based mentors), which were analyzed thematically. We organized our findings according to Bowen et al.'s feasibility framework. Findings spoke to the acceptability, practicality, and integration of the ABCD program. We found that young peer supporters were seen as acceptable program implementers; able to adopt responsive, engaging, and nonjudgmental approaches; and supported through training, technical skills development, and supervision, alongside purposeful facility integration. Importantly, we also found evidence reflecting the roles of demand and adaptation in program delivery (i.e., how peers responded to emerging participant needs or pivoted in their approach based on shifting circumstances). We conclude that considerations of intervention feasibility and/or program fidelity should be attuned to the dynamic qualities of young peer supporters as implementers and should extend beyond standard modes of assessment to consider intervention codevelopment and implementation as an iterative and adaptive process.
撒哈拉以南非洲的青春期女孩和年轻女性感染艾滋病毒、意外怀孕和早育的风险很高。这些相互交织的风险会对她们的发展轨迹和终身幸福产生不利影响。由于生活在这些环境中的感染艾滋病毒的年轻母亲承受着高度的耻辱、羞耻和孤立,因此针对这一群体的量身定制的社会心理干预方法至关重要,但却无法获得。招募年轻的同龄支持者可能是扩大卫生服务范围和增强社会心理幸福感的一种有前途的方式。迄今为止,很少有基于同龄人的干预措施针对感染艾滋病毒的年轻母亲。在 2019 年至 2021 年期间,我们与年轻的同龄支持者一起共同制定了一项基于同龄人的、以机构为基础的干预方案,即 Ask-Boost-Connect-Discuss(ABCD),以满足马拉维、坦桑尼亚、乌干达和赞比亚感染艾滋病毒的年轻母亲的社会心理需求。然后,我们分析了 ABCD 的方案数据,以评估使用年轻同龄人提供社会心理支持的可行性。数据来源包括干预后的访谈、焦点小组以及来自多个利益相关者(参与者、同龄支持者、他们的主管和基于诊所的导师)的书面反馈,这些数据通过主题分析进行了分析。我们根据 Bowen 等人的可行性框架组织了我们的发现。研究结果表明了 ABCD 方案的可接受性、实用性和整合性。我们发现,年轻的同龄支持者被视为可接受的方案执行者;能够采用响应性、引人入胜且非评判性的方法;并通过培训、技术技能发展和监督以及有针对性的机构整合得到支持。重要的是,我们还发现了反映方案交付中需求和适应的证据(即,同龄人如何应对新出现的参与者需求,或根据不断变化的情况调整他们的方法)。我们的结论是,应该根据同龄支持者作为执行者的动态特质来考虑干预措施的可行性和/或方案的保真度,并超越标准的评估模式,将干预措施的共同制定和实施视为一个迭代和适应的过程。