Sport-based HIV prevention HIV remains pressing threat to young people –34M infected, 2.5M new...

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Sport-based HIV prevention HIV remains pressing threat to young people 34M infected, 2.5M new infections per year About 35% of infections are among young people Limited effectiveness of youth prevention efforts Urgent need for effective prevention work Increasing use of sports-based HIV prevention Dozens of organizations and funders across the world e.g. Grassroot Soccer, Kicking AIDS Out, MYSA, Parivartan USAID, Nike, EJAF, MAC AIDS Fund, Comic Relief, Barclays

Transcript of Sport-based HIV prevention HIV remains pressing threat to young people –34M infected, 2.5M new...

Page 1: Sport-based HIV prevention HIV remains pressing threat to young people –34M infected, 2.5M new infections per year –About 35% of infections are among young.

Sport-based HIV prevention

• HIV remains pressing threat to young people– 34M infected, 2.5M new infections per year– About 35% of infections are among young people – Limited effectiveness of youth prevention efforts– Urgent need for effective prevention work

• Increasing use of sports-based HIV prevention– Dozens of organizations and funders across the world

• e.g. Grassroot Soccer, Kicking AIDS Out, MYSA, Parivartan• USAID, Nike, EJAF, MAC AIDS Fund, Comic Relief, Barclays

– Programs use sports themes, activities, role models

– Growing evidence base on effectiveness

Page 2: Sport-based HIV prevention HIV remains pressing threat to young people –34M infected, 2.5M new infections per year –About 35% of infections are among young.

Assessing the evidence of sport-based HIV prevention through a systematic review

Zachary A. Kaufman, MScPhD Candidate, LSHTM

Page 3: Sport-based HIV prevention HIV remains pressing threat to young people –34M infected, 2.5M new infections per year –About 35% of infections are among young.

Systematic review objectives

• To assess and synthesize the evidence

of effectiveness for SBHP interventions

• To identify gaps in existing research in

order to inform future studies

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Methods• Inclusion criteria

– Assessing SBHP effectiveness quantitatively– Interventions using sport at least partially– Interventions aimed at preventing HIV– RCTs, quasi-experimental, pre/post, cross-sectional

• Study quality appraisal– Adapted Newcastle-Ottawa scale (NOS)

• Analysed evidence strength across outcomes– Knowledge, attitudes, communication, behaviour– Service uptake, biological outcomes (HIV, HSV, etc)– Sensitivity analysis: restricted to published studies

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Included studies (n=21)Ref Authors Year Source Study Design N Country Age group Intervention Length K A C B S Bio

16 Clark et al. 2006 AIDS & BehaviorQuasi-

experimental304 Zimbabwe 12-14 years GRS

4 sessions 8 hours

24Peacock-Villada et al.

2007New Dir for Youth

DevelopmentPre/Post 274 Zambia 10-18 years GRS/Resiliency 6 weeks

23 Maro et al. 2009Scand J Med Sci

SportsQuasi-

experimental764 Tanzania 12-15 years EMIMA/KAO 8 weeks

25 Rhodes et al. 2009AIDS Education and Prevention

Quasi-experimental

222 USAmean age: 29 years

HoMBReS 18 months

18 Fuller et al. 2010British Journal of Sports Medicine

Quasi-experimental

370 South Africa 11-15 yearsFootball-For-

Health11 sessions 16.5 hours

17 Delva et al. 2010 AIDS Care Cross-sectional 892 Kenya 12-24 years MYSA Varied

19 Fuller et al. 2011British Journal of Sports Medicine

Pre/Post 389 Mauritius 12-15 years 11 For Health11 sessions 16.5 hours

19 Fuller et al. 2011British Journal of Sports Medicine

Pre/Post 395 Zimbabwe 10-14 years 11 For Health11 sessions 16.5 hours

21 Kaufman et al. In press AIDS CareQuasi-

experimental140

Dominican Rep.

10-20 years GRS5 sessions 10 hours

29 Rajan et al. 2008136th APHA

Annual MeetingPre/Post 2,197 Ethiopia 13-24 years

Sport for Life^ Youth Action Kit^

24-30 activities

26 Gray et al. 2009IV SA AIDS Conference

Quasi-experimental

478 South Africa 13-18 yearsExtra Time Magazine^

Just magazine

20 Kaufman et al. 2010XVIII International AIDS Conference

Cross-sectional 246 Zimbabwe 15-19 years GRS 10 hours

20 Kaufman et al. 2010XVIII International AIDS Conference

Cross-sectional 307 Botswana 15-19 years GRS 10 hours

22 Kruse 2006 NORAD Cross-sectional 80 Zambia 14-18 years KAO Unclear

15 Mercy Corps 2007 mercycorps.org Pre/Post 280 Liberia 16-30 years Yes to Soccer^14 activities

6 weeks

15 Mercy Corps 2007 mercycorps.org Pre/Post 360Southern

Sudan14-25 years

Sports for Peace and Life^

15 activities 8 weeks

27 Wardell 2009 AuthorQuasi-

experimental94 St. Lucia 10-16 years

Football For Lives^

Unclear

30 Kim et al. 2010 Author Pre/Post 69 USA 10-15 years Grassroot Project^ 8 weeks

28 Luppe 2010 Author Pre/Post 61 South Africa 9-20 years GRS8 sessions 4 weeks

31Braunschweig et al.

2011 Author Pre/Post 612 South Africa 14-17 years Generation Skillz^ 11 sessions

^ Intervention adapted from GRS curriculum Outcome reportedly assessed in this study

*K=Knowledge; A=Reported attitudes; C=Reported communication; B=Reported behaviours; S=Service uptake; Bio=Biomarkers

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Outcomes Assessed*Intervention DetailsStudy Details

David Ross
Omit this. Too much detail and anyway the text will be illegible. If there is essential info within it, then extract that or a summary of it (eg. breakdowns by eg. study design, geographical distribution, etc) into a new slide. But the font size must be at least 20.
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No randomised controlled trials.

No studies with biomarkers.

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Figure 2: SBHP effects on knowledge

David Ross
Again, far too much, illegible detail. Suggestion as before.
Page 9: Sport-based HIV prevention HIV remains pressing threat to young people –34M infected, 2.5M new infections per year –About 35% of infections are among young.

Figure 3: SBHP effects on communication

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Conclusions on effectiveness of SBHP

• Overall strong evidence of effect on:– HIV-related knowledge– HIV-related communication

• Overall weak evidence of effect on:– HIV-related attitudes– Reported sexual behaviour

• Generally low-quality studies to date– Need stronger methodology

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Conclusions: gaps in research

• Need stronger methodology– Randomisation: in sampling and allocation– Longer-term follow-up– More objective, rigorous outcomes

• Effects on service uptake?– Does SBHP increase HCT uptake?– Can SBHP increase MMC uptake?

• Effects on biological outcomes?– Does SBHP reduce HIV, STI incidence?

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Questions and Discussion