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Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

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cash, care and HIVrisk for adolescents in southern africa Cluver, Lucie; Orkin, Mark; Boyes, Mark; Sherr, Lorraine
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Page 1: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

cash, care and HIV‐risk

for adolescents in southern africa

Cluver, Lucie; Orkin, Mark; Boyes, Mark; Sherr, Lorraine

Page 2: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

South Africa national longitudinal study of adolescents6850 adolescents, 2500 adult caregivers, 2008‐2012

• N=6000 (age: 10‐18) • 3 provinces South Africa; 6 sites >30% HIV‐prevalence• Stratified random sampling of census areas, urban/rural• Every household with a child aged 10‐17• 1 year follow‐up in 2 provinces: 97% follow‐up

Controlling for prior HIV risk

Page 3: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Effects of abuse, poverty & parental AIDS on female adolescent risk of transactional sex

Cluver, Orkin, Boyes, Meinck, Makhasi (2011). JAIDS

1%

7%

13%

57%

Healthy family AIDS‐sick parent Abused & hungry AIDS‐sick parent,abused, hungry

Page 4: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

unconditional governmentcash transfers

Page 5: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

12‐14 years 15‐17 years

% Incidence of transactional sex(OR .49 CI .26‐.93*)

National cash transfers reduce incidence & prevalence of transactional sex and age‐disparate sex for girls

No cash transfer

Child cash transfer

Cluver, Boyes, Orkin, Pantelic, Molwena, Sherr (2013). The Lancet Global Health.

12‐14 years 15‐17 years

% Incidence of age‐disparate sex (OR .29 CI .13‐.67**)

Page 6: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

cash plus care?

Page 7: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Can CASH + CARE reduce HIV risk behavior?

CASH

CARE

Incidence rates:

Transactional sex

Age‐disparate sex

Sex using substances

Multiple partners

Unprotected sex

Page 8: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Child‐focused grant 

Regular food parcels  

Free school meals

School counsellor

Food garden

Positive parenting

Teacher support

Page 9: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

% girls with incidence of 1+ HIV risk behavior: Cash plus care = halved risk

Cash alone: OR .63Cash plus care: OR .55

41%

25%

15%

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

no support cash cash plus care

Controlling for: family HIV/AIDS, informal/formal housing, age of child, poverty levels, number of moves of home, baseline HIV risk behaviour

Cluver, Orkin, Boyes, Sherr (in press). AIDS.

Page 10: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

% boys with incidence of 1+ HIV risk behavior:Cash plus care = halved risk

Cash alone: no significant effectCash plus care: OR .50

42%

28%

17%

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

no support cash cash plus care

Controlling for: family HIV/AIDS, informal/formal housing, age of child, poverty levels, number of moves of home, baseline HIV risk behaviour

Cluver, Orkin, Boyes, Sherr (in press). AIDS.

Page 11: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

how does social protection work?

Page 12: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Hunger

Community violence

Parental HIV/AIDS

Informal settlement

2011Structural deprivation

2012HIV‐risk behavior incidence

Poverty & family AIDS predict adolescent HIV‐risks: how?

Transactional sex

Age‐disparate sex

Sex using substances

Multiple partners

Unprotected sex

controlling for: baseline HIV‐risk, age, gender

Page 13: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

HIV‐risk behaviorincidence

Structural deprivation

school dropout

child abuse

conduct problems

drug/alcohol use

psychological distress

controlling for: baseline HIV‐risk, age, genderAll p= .05‐.001

Psychosocial problems

Structural deprivation increases HIV‐risk by increasing psychosocial problems

Page 14: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

ReducedHIV‐risk behaviorincidence

Structural deprivation

Reduced psycho‐social problems

controlling for: baseline HIV‐risk, age, gender

CASH

CARE

Cash and care: greatest effects for highest‐risk adolescents

Page 15: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

New analyses – social protection and ART adherence

Page 16: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

HIV+ adolescents: ART adherence, cash and care• Indicative percentages only, n=250• Random sampling 32 state clinics, South Africa

30

35

40

45

50

55

60

65

70

75

80

no support cash: transfer/foodgarden/food parcel

care: positiveparenting/treatment

buddy

cash plus care

Past week ART adherent (%)Cash plus care: OR 2.42

Page 17: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Unconditional, government cash transfers reduce adolescent HIV risks

Cash plus care gives greater effects

Effective in real‐world sub‐Saharan Africa  

Cash and care mitigate risk pathways

Page 18: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Funders: thank you.

Page 19: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Noxolo Nitricia Myeketsi

My personal experience of social protection and HIVSouth Africa

Page 20: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Crossroads where I live

Page 21: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

My grandmother

Page 22: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Outside my grandmother’s house

Page 23: Cash, care and HIV-risk for adolescents in South Africa

Now I am at the University of the Western Cape 


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