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Journal Article

Citation

Meinck F, Pantelic M, Spreckelsen TF, Orza L, Little MT, Nittas V, Picker V, Bustamam AA, Romero RH, Mella EPD, Stöckl H. AIDS 2019; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Department of Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, United Kingdom.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/QAD.0000000000002337

PMID

31373916

Abstract

OBJECTIVE(S): This study explored the effectiveness of gender-based violence (GBV) interventions on young people living with or affected by HIV in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).

DESIGN: Systematic review and meta-analysis.

METHODS: We pre-registered a protocol, then searched thirteen databases and grey literature. We screened randomised and quasi-experimental studies (n = 2199) of young people (aged 10-24) living with or affected by HIV in LMICs. Outcomes were GBV and/or GBV-related attitudes. We appraised the data for risk of bias and quality of evidence. Narrative syntheses and multi-level random effects meta-analyses were conducted.

RESULTS: We included 18 studies evaluating 21 interventions. Intervention arms were categorised as: a) sexual health and social empowerment (SHSE) (n = 7); b) SHSE plus economic strengthening (n = 4); c) self-defence (n = 3); d) safer schools (n = 2); e) economic strengthening only (n = 2); f) GBV sensitisation (n = 2) and g) safer schools plus parenting (n = 1). Risk of bias was moderate/high and quality of evidence low. Narrative syntheses indicated promising effects on GBV exposure, but no or mixed effects on GBV perpetration and attitudes for self-defence and GBV sensitisation interventions. Safer schools interventions showed no effects. For SHSE interventions and SHSE plus economic strengthening, meta-analysis showed a small reduction in GBV exposure but not perpetration. Economic-only interventions had no overall effect.

CONCLUSIONS: SHSE, SHSE plus and self-defence and gender sensitisation interventions may be effective for GBV exposure and GBV-related attitudes but not for GBV perpetration. However, the quality of evidence is poor. Future intervention research must include both boys and girls, adolescents living with HIV and key populations.


Language: en

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