Empowering parents for human immunodeficiency virus prevention: Health and sex education at home

Background: Improving health literacy amongst human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive mothers could strengthen child and adolescent HIV prevention. The Amagugu intervention included health literacy materials to strengthen maternal communication and has demonstrated success in low-resource HIV-en...

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Main Authors: Taygen Edwards, Ntombizodumo Mkwanazi, Joanie Mitchell, Ruth M. Bland, Tamsen J. Rochat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2020-06-01
Series:Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajhivmed.org.za/index.php/hivmed/article/view/970
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spelling doaj-aaad25d151a94b0593eeb45261061de72020-11-25T03:07:14ZengAOSISSouthern African Journal of HIV Medicine1608-96932078-67512020-06-01211e1e1310.4102/sajhivmed.v21i1.970682Empowering parents for human immunodeficiency virus prevention: Health and sex education at homeTaygen Edwards0Ntombizodumo Mkwanazi1Joanie Mitchell2Ruth M. Bland3Tamsen J. Rochat4Africa Health Research Institute, Somkhele, South Africa; and, Liggins Institute, University of Auckland, AucklandHuman and Social Capabilities Division, Human Sciences Research Council, Durban, South Africa; and, DSI-NRF Centre of Excellence in Human Development, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, JohannesburgLentegeur Psychiatric Hospital, Department of Health, Government of the Western Cape, Cape TownRoyal Hospital for Sick Children, Glasgow, Scotland; and, Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland; and, School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand, JohannesburgDSI-NRF Centre of Excellence in Human Development, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; and, SAMRC Developmental Pathways to Health Research Unit (DPHRU), Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, JohannesburgBackground: Improving health literacy amongst human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive mothers could strengthen child and adolescent HIV prevention. The Amagugu intervention included health literacy materials to strengthen maternal communication and has demonstrated success in low-resource HIV-endemic settings. Objectives: Our aims were to (1) evaluate whether Amagugu materials improved health literacy leading to changes in parental behaviour towards communicating on topics such as HIV, health behaviours and sex education, and (2) explore what additional information and materials mothers would find helpful. Method: The Amagugu evaluation included 281 HIV-positive mothers and their HIV-uninfected children (6–10 years). Process evaluation data from exit interviews were analysed using content analysis and logistic regression techniques. Results: Of 281 mothers, 276 (98.0%) requested more educational storybooks: 99 (35.2%) on moral development/future aspirations, 92 (32.7%) on general health, safety and health promotion, and 67 (23.8%) on HIV and disease management. Compared to baseline, mothers reported that the materials increased discussion on the risks of bullying from friends (150; 53.4%), teacher problems (142; 50.5%), physical abuse (147; 52.3%) and sexual abuse (126; 44.8%). Most mothers used the ‘HIV Body Map’ for health (274; 97.5%) and sex education (267; 95.0%). The use of a low-cost doll was reported to enhance mother–child communication by increasing mother–child play (264; 94.3%) and maternal attentiveness to the child’s feelings (262; 93.6%). Conclusion: Parent-led health education in the home seems feasible, acceptable and effective and should be capitalised on in HIV prevention strategies. Further testing in controlled studies is recommended.https://sajhivmed.org.za/index.php/hivmed/article/view/970health educationsex educationintervention materialshiv preventionhiv-uninfected childrenparent–child communication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Taygen Edwards
Ntombizodumo Mkwanazi
Joanie Mitchell
Ruth M. Bland
Tamsen J. Rochat
spellingShingle Taygen Edwards
Ntombizodumo Mkwanazi
Joanie Mitchell
Ruth M. Bland
Tamsen J. Rochat
Empowering parents for human immunodeficiency virus prevention: Health and sex education at home
Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine
health education
sex education
intervention materials
hiv prevention
hiv-uninfected children
parent–child communication
author_facet Taygen Edwards
Ntombizodumo Mkwanazi
Joanie Mitchell
Ruth M. Bland
Tamsen J. Rochat
author_sort Taygen Edwards
title Empowering parents for human immunodeficiency virus prevention: Health and sex education at home
title_short Empowering parents for human immunodeficiency virus prevention: Health and sex education at home
title_full Empowering parents for human immunodeficiency virus prevention: Health and sex education at home
title_fullStr Empowering parents for human immunodeficiency virus prevention: Health and sex education at home
title_full_unstemmed Empowering parents for human immunodeficiency virus prevention: Health and sex education at home
title_sort empowering parents for human immunodeficiency virus prevention: health and sex education at home
publisher AOSIS
series Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine
issn 1608-9693
2078-6751
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Background: Improving health literacy amongst human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive mothers could strengthen child and adolescent HIV prevention. The Amagugu intervention included health literacy materials to strengthen maternal communication and has demonstrated success in low-resource HIV-endemic settings. Objectives: Our aims were to (1) evaluate whether Amagugu materials improved health literacy leading to changes in parental behaviour towards communicating on topics such as HIV, health behaviours and sex education, and (2) explore what additional information and materials mothers would find helpful. Method: The Amagugu evaluation included 281 HIV-positive mothers and their HIV-uninfected children (6–10 years). Process evaluation data from exit interviews were analysed using content analysis and logistic regression techniques. Results: Of 281 mothers, 276 (98.0%) requested more educational storybooks: 99 (35.2%) on moral development/future aspirations, 92 (32.7%) on general health, safety and health promotion, and 67 (23.8%) on HIV and disease management. Compared to baseline, mothers reported that the materials increased discussion on the risks of bullying from friends (150; 53.4%), teacher problems (142; 50.5%), physical abuse (147; 52.3%) and sexual abuse (126; 44.8%). Most mothers used the ‘HIV Body Map’ for health (274; 97.5%) and sex education (267; 95.0%). The use of a low-cost doll was reported to enhance mother–child communication by increasing mother–child play (264; 94.3%) and maternal attentiveness to the child’s feelings (262; 93.6%). Conclusion: Parent-led health education in the home seems feasible, acceptable and effective and should be capitalised on in HIV prevention strategies. Further testing in controlled studies is recommended.
topic health education
sex education
intervention materials
hiv prevention
hiv-uninfected children
parent–child communication
url https://sajhivmed.org.za/index.php/hivmed/article/view/970
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