School, Supervision and Adolescent-Sensitive Clinic Care: Combination Social Protection and Reduced Unprotected Sex Among HIV-Positive Adolescents in South Africa.

Journal: AIDS and behavior

Volume: 21

Issue: 9

Year of Publication: 2018

Affiliated Institutions:  Centre for Evidence-Based Intervention, Department of Social Policy & Intervention, University of Oxford Barnett House, Wellington Square, Oxford, OX ER, UK. elona.toska@spi.ox.ac.uk. Centre for Evidence-Based Intervention, Department of Social Policy & Intervention, University of Oxford Barnett House, Wellington Square, Oxford, OX ER, UK. Health Psychology and Behavioural Medicine Research Group, School of Psychology and Speech Pathology, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia. Tulane University School of Medicine, Tulane Ave, New Orleans, LA, , USA. AIDS and Society Research Unit, Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town, . Leslie Building, Private Bag Rondebosch, Cape Town, Western Cape, , South Africa. University College London, London, UK.

Abstract summary 

Social protection can reduce HIV-risk behavior in general adolescent populations, but evidence among HIV-positive adolescents is limited. This study quantitatively tests whether social protection is associated with reduced unprotected sex among 1060 ART-eligible adolescents from 53 government facilities in South Africa. Potential social protection included nine 'cash/cash-in-kind' and 'care' provisions. Analyses tested interactive/additive effects using logistic regressions and marginal effects models, controlling for covariates. 18 % of all HIV-positive adolescents and 28 % of girls reported unprotected sex. Lower rates of unprotected sex were associated with access to school (OR 0.52 95 % CI 0.33-0.82 p = 0.005), parental supervision (OR 0.54 95 % CI 0.33-0.90 p = 0.019), and adolescent-sensitive clinic care (OR 0.43 95 % CI 0.25-0.73 p = 0.002). Gender moderated the effect of adolescent-sensitive clinic care. Combination social protection had additive effects amongst girls: without any provisions 49 % reported unprotected sex; with 1-2 provisions 13-38 %; and with all provisions 9 %. Combination social protection has the potential to promote safer sex among HIV-positive adolescents, particularly girls.

Authors & Co-authors:  Toska Elona E Cluver Lucie D LD Boyes Mark E ME Isaacsohn Maya M Hodes Rebecca R Sherr Lorraine L

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations :  UNICEF. Towards an AIDS-free generation—children and AIDS: sixth stocktaking report. New York; 2013.
Authors :  6
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1007/s10461-016-1539-y
SSN : 1573-3254
Study Population
Girls
Mesh Terms
Adolescent
Other Terms
HIV-positive adolescents;Secondary prevention;Social protection;South Africa;Unprotected sex
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Quantitative
Country of Study
South Africa
Publication Country
United States