Making sense of HIV Testing: Social representations in young Africans' HIV-related narratives from six countries Open Access
Beres, Laura K. (2011)
Abstract
HIV testing and counseling is a critical intervention to support
treatment access and
prevention of new infections. Despite high rates of infection and
attempts to increase testing in
this age group, young Africans are those least likely to have
tested for HIV. With the aim of
informing interventions that encourage HIV testing and promote
healthy testing outcomes, this
study seeks to understand how young Africans imagine and make sense
of HIV testing.
"Scenarios from Africa" scriptwriting contests invite young people
to contribute ideas for short
films about HIV. Using thematic narrative-based approaches, we
analyzed a stratified random
sample of 586 (~5%) of these narratives written in 2005 by males
and females aged 10-24 from
Senegal, Burkina Faso, South-East Nigeria, Kenya, Namibia and
Swaziland. The factors
influencing testing behavior and outcomes are represented as
complex, interactive and
multifaceted. Personal perception of risk, whether low or high, was
shown to both inhibit and
facilitate HIV testing. Social support from family, peers and the
community was depicted as
instrumental in promoting testing and beneficial testing outcomes,
such as preventative behavior
change and adoption of positive living. Counseling was represented
as a crucial element of the
testing process. Young authors depicted the benefits of integrating
testing into the standard
"ABC" ("abstinence", "be faithful", "use condoms") of HIV
prevention. As multiple factors
mediate the testing decision-making process, one-dimensional
interventions are unlikely to effect
a shift towards increased testing or more beneficial testing
outcomes. Interventions need to
operate with greater understanding of the multi-layered and
context-specific factors that motivate
and impede the decision to test. Despite current low levels of
testing, the narratives demonstrate
the potential for favorable attitudes toward testing among young
Africans and the opportunity to
increase HIV testing in this demographic.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Introduction..............................1
Literature Review.......................3
Manuscript..............................25
Contribution of the student........26
Abstract.................................27
Introduction............................28
Methods.................................29
Results...................................34
Discussion...............................52
Conclusion..............................59
Manuscript References..............61
Public Health Implications..........66
References.............................70
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