Post-intervention gendered impacts and moderating factors of a government cash plus intervention for adolescents in Tanzania.

Journal: SSM - population health

Volume: 29

Issue: 

Year of Publication: 

Affiliated Institutions:  World Food Programme, Rome, Italy. Policy Research Solutions (PRESTO), Buffalo, NY, USA. UNICEF Innocenti - Office of Global Foresight and Research, Florence, Italy. Tanzania Social Action Fund, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. UNICEF Tanzania, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Policy Research Solutions (PRESTO) and University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA.

Abstract summary 

Reducing poverty (including multidimensional poverty) and gender inequality can improve social development outcomes. Studies have sought to understand how poverty reduction and intersectoral programming targeted to adolescents can facilitate safe transitions to adulthood among adolescents. However, most intersectoral interventions for adolescents to date have been implemented by non-governmental actors with limited generalizability and potential for scale-up. In the current study, we examine 22-month post intervention impacts of the "plus components" of a cash plus intervention, Ujana Salama (Swahili for "Safe Youth") targeted to adolescents ages 14-19 years (males and females) in households participating in a government social protection program in Tanzania. The government-implemented cash plus intervention, comprised of livelihoods and life skills training, a productive grant, mentoring, and linkages to adolescent-friendly health services, was implemented over 18 months in 2018 and 2019.Using a cluster randomized controlled trial, we estimated post-intervention impacts in 2021 on the following domains: relationships, modern contraception, health seeking and HIV knowledge and risk, psychosocial outcomes and attitude, and violence. We further examined whether contextual factors, including gender norms and quality of health services, moderated these post-intervention impacts.Few impacts found at earlier rounds were still evident post-intervention. Exceptions include protective impacts on lifetime sexual violence risk among females and increases in sexual and reproductive health services utilization among males. Moreover, newly detected adverse impacts on mental health contrasted with earlier protective impacts.While external factors such as lengthy delays of cash transfer payments to adolescents' households and the COVID-19 pandemic may have mitigated the potential for sustained impacts of this intervention, findings suggest that future programs may need to provide different combinations of programming, provide support longer-term, or intervene at more levels of the social ecological model to influence many of the outcomes examined and to effect more lasting change.

Authors & Co-authors:  Waidler Jennifer J Prencipe Leah L Tirivayi Nyasha N Mnyawami Lukongo Tumpe T Luchemba Paul P Eeataama Frank F Matafu Jennifer J Palermo Tia T

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations :  Abrahams N., Devries K., Watts C., Pallitto C., Petzold M., Shamu S., GarcÍa-Moreno C. Worldwide prevalence of non-partner sexual violence: A systematic review. The Lancet. 2014;383(9929):1648–1654.
Authors :  9
Identifiers
Doi : 101760
SSN : 2352-8273
Study Population
Females
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
Adolescents;Africa;Cash plus;Cash transfers;Multisectoral intervention;Tanzania
Study Design
Randomized Control Trial
Study Approach
Country of Study
Tanzania
Publication Country
England