Desmond Tutu HIV Centre, Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Centre for Social Science Research, Faculty of Humanities, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Front Public Health. 2024 Oct 9;12:1329425. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1329425. eCollection 2024.
Investing in the capabilities of adolescents is essential to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, which focus on realising adolescent girls and young women's (AGYW) rights to education, health, bodily autonomy and integrity, sexual and reproductive health (SRH) and well-being. Despite significant scientific and programmatic progress in understanding and responding to their unique and intersecting vulnerabilities, AGYW continue to face disproportionate risk of STIs, HIV and early pregnancy. Health promotion and preventative interventions stand to be improved by early and meaningful engagement of AGYW in intervention design and delivery.
This study employed Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) to co-generate lessons for future school-based SRH programming. The 5-step YPAR process included: (1) youth investigator recruitment; (2) youth investigator training and co-design of YPAR methods; (3) youth investigator-led data collection; (4) collaborative analysis and interpretation; and (5) dissemination.
Collaborative analysis revealed improvements in self-concept and bodily autonomy, understanding and formation of healthy relationships and demand for girl-centred health services and information at school. Additionally, the study highlights YPAR's positive influence on both the collaborative process and outputs of research. Further, it provides further insight into the quantitative biomedical and socio-behavioural findings of a larger experimental impact evaluation, in which it was nested.
Results from YPAR methods point to high programme acceptability and practical lessons to inform future school-based SRH programming. The inclusion of adolescent girls in the design, delivery and evaluation of intervention research that affects their lives is an important strategy for improving acceptability, and also has demonstrated value in building their health and social assets. Future recommendations include parental involvement, and employing quantitative measures for better evaluation of youth engagement, leadership and partnerships in the research process.
投资于青少年的能力对于实现联合国可持续发展目标至关重要,这些目标侧重于实现少女和年轻妇女(AGYW)受教育、健康、身体自主权和完整、性与生殖健康(SRH)和福祉的权利。尽管在理解和应对她们独特且相互交织的脆弱性方面取得了重大的科学和计划进展,但 AGYW 仍然面临着不成比例的性传播感染、艾滋病毒和早孕风险。通过让 AGYW 早期和有意义地参与干预设计和实施,可以改善健康促进和预防干预措施。
本研究采用青年参与式行动研究(YPAR)来共同为未来基于学校的 SRH 规划提供经验教训。YPAR 的 5 个步骤包括:(1)青年调查员招募;(2)青年调查员培训和 YPAR 方法共同设计;(3)青年调查员主导的数据收集;(4)协作分析和解释;(5)传播。
协作分析揭示了自我概念和身体自主权、对健康关系的理解和形成以及对以女孩为中心的学校保健服务和信息的需求的改善。此外,该研究还突出了 YPAR 对研究协作过程和成果的积极影响。此外,它还深入了解了一项更大的实验性影响评估中定量生物医学和社会行为学发现,该评估嵌套其中。
YPAR 方法的结果表明,该方案具有很高的可接受性,并为未来基于学校的 SRH 规划提供了实际经验教训。让少女参与影响她们生活的干预研究的设计、实施和评估是提高可接受性的重要策略,并且已经证明在培养她们的健康和社会资产方面具有价值。未来的建议包括家长参与,并采用定量措施,更好地评估青年在研究过程中的参与、领导能力和伙伴关系。