Designing HIV prevention programmes for adolescents: Lessons from the A360 project – Morenike Folayan

Designing HIV prevention programmes for adolescents: Lessons from the A360 project – Morenike Folayan

By Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan
 
The HIV prevalence in Nigeria has been reported to be stable at 3.0% for several years by UNAIDS. The National Agency for the control of AIDS under the leadership of Prof John Idoko had however continued to highlight that the HIV prevalence estimate for Nigeria was exaggerated; and that the national prevalence had likely reduced to something in the range of 1.5% to 1.8% over the years.

 

He derived this evidence from series of national HIV testing programmes conducted during the period he was the Director General of the Agency.
However, he could not establish this evidence. His justification for making the assertions were also fraught with bias – public HIV testing without a defined sampling framework makes recruitment of study participants skewed as people who know their HIV status may not join public HIV testing campaigns readily.

In addition, making a case that the HIV treatment programmes were failing to identify new cases in large numbers is not substantive evidence for the absence of HIV positive cases: it is public knowledge that there are many rural and hard-to-reach communities that have not been effectively reached with HIV programmes.

The planned National HIV indicator survey to be funded by PEPFAR, the largest indicator survey to be conducted in the world, will put an end to the debate. It is anticipated that data on HIV prevalence in a number of states in Nigeria will start rolling in by the end of the year. The national report should be out by 2019.

What does this however mean for adolescent girls 15 – 19 years of age?

 Aboki et al, in a prior publication, had shown that the HIV prevalence among adolescents had continued to increase in Nigeria. This may be a result of an harvesting phenomenon though, as many children born with HIV are now reaching adolescence.

But more than that, it may also be an indication that a number of HIV negative sexually active adolescents are not receiving adequate HIV prevention interventions.

 Ezechi et al had once provided evidence from their clinic data from the National Institute of Medical Research, Yaba, Lagos, that a significant number of adolescents receiving HIV treatment at the center were infected through sexual transmission in adolescence.

 HIV prevention intervention for adolescents in Nigeria has been poorly planned and had received poor attention. The effectiveness of models to reach adolescents in Nigeria is not known and have not been properly studied.

 The DREAMS project supported by PEPFAR in other countries in Africa is a structured HIV prevention programme targeting adolescents and young women. The focus of the programme was mainly to address structural barriers to accessing HIV prevention services. The project led to a reduction of HIV incidence by 12% to 40%. This suggests very clearly that to succeed with HIV prevention for adolescents and young women, national HIV prevention programmes need to address structural barriers – barriers to access to education, barriers to access to economic empowerment.

 We also see very clearly from global evidence that a focus on biomedical interventions for adolescent girls will not turn the tide around. Reports of results from microbicide studies and PrEP access studies that disaggregate data show that adherence to use of biomedical HIV prevention products is challenging for adolescents. The same is the case with the use of antiretroviral drugs for adolescents living with HIV. Success with programmes on treatment as prevention focusing on adolescents may also be limited.

Evolving evidence suggest very strongly that for HIV prevention programmes designed to address the needs of adolescent girls in Nigeria to succeed, the programmes need to address structural drivers of the epidemic. The programmes need to improve their social life: HIV prevention access should be situated in a comprehensive intervention model that empowers then with skills for life and living; and with skills to improve their independency.

 

 The A360 programme in Nigeria is a good example of a programme to model a comprehensive HIV prevention intervention programme for adolescents after.

The A360 programme, hosted by the Society for Family Health and funded by Bill and Melinda Gates and the Children Investment Fund Foundation, promotes access of adolescents 15-19 years to contraception.

This is a new project in Nigeria with all the potentials for community uproar and resistance due to religious and cultural upheavals about adolescents’ access to sexual and reproductive health services. Despite these risks, the project is working and working well.

The project learnt to integrate contraception access within a model that addresses the social risk for adolescents’ pregnancy – economic empowerment; active engagement of adolescents during their spare time; and motivation for change through intense peer group education and one-on-one counselling.

The planning and implementation of the entire programme within communities and states allow for excellent community engagement and stakeholder involvement including involvement and project ownership by policy makers. Contraception services is introduced and provided for girls who understand the need for this having undertaken skills building and motivational classes. Those who access services also become the ones who recruit peers for the services. The model allows for fast recruitment of peers to access services. Multiple success stories about how lives have changed have been documented on the project.

Designers and implementers of HIV prevention programmes in Nigeria can learn from this experience.
There is little need to reinvent the wheel.

Formative research needs to be conducted so that HIV prevention projects targeting adolescents can understand the specific community context needs of the adolescents.

It is important to understand that adolescent girls are not homogenous. There are interventions appropriate for adolescents based on their culture, geographical locations, age segmentation, marital status and a whole lot more confounders. Understanding these confounders and addressing them through the mix of a combination of interventions identified using a human centre design approach will result in meaningful impact.

The global goal for eliminating HIV as a global crisis by 2030 is near the corner. Nigeria will fail to meet this target if drastic changes are not made to the way it manages its HIV programmes – treatment and prevention.

We can make it if we try.
Eradication of stigma against HIV and AIDS – Amosu Segun Temidayo

Eradication of stigma against HIV and AIDS – Amosu Segun Temidayo

   
Living with HIV is not a crime. HIV positive patients  should  be mentally healthy enough to speak opening about their HIV status if and when they want to discuss opening about this. Anyone can live life to the fullest even with the HIV virus if the supportive environment is created. People living with HIV can speak up about their HIV status to demystify HIV infection, assert their rights to life, to care, to access quality healthcare services, to travel anywhere around the globe just like everyone that live with chronic diseases like cancer. Living with HIV infection is not a crime neither is it a death sentence. HIV no be barrier to loving, caring, sharing hugs and eating with loved ones. It is not an excuse for isolation
Everyone living with HIV need to start medication as soon as diagnosis is made. This is important so as to ensure the number of viruses in the body is kept as low as possible, and the number of soldiers fighting infections in the body is high enough and healthy to help ensure one is fine. People who know their HIV status are likely to stay healthier than persons who do not know their HIV status.   Make yourself  happy, live your life to the fullest,  catch fun, enjoy your life.
HIV no dey kill ooooooo. Na the stigma and isolation dey kill very fast. I stand against HIV stigma and discrimination. HIV infection no be crime ooooooooooooooo!
-Amosu Segun Temidayo
PROPER PLACEMENT OF MALE CONDOM – David Ekpenyoung Ita

PROPER PLACEMENT OF MALE CONDOM – David Ekpenyoung Ita

More men are using condom. Many are however placing the condom wrongly. Often, condom is worn tightly around the penis without giving room for the air space at the tip of the condom. The air space is needed to collect the condom after ejaculation. From my field experiences during peer education sessions, only seven of 20 persons age 20 – 50 years who were asked to place to condom on a penile model did it making provision for the air space.
These were all persons who boasted of knowing how to place the condom and who stated they had been using the male condom. I personally also think this improper placement may explain many of the complaint of poor sexual sensation when using condom. We do know tear of the condom can result from this faulty wearing of the condom. 
We peer educators also need to emphasis how to open the condom pack. Before I start the peer session on condom, I gave five males a condom each to tear and wear the penis model. More often than not, at least three persons struggle to open the condom pack. They make attempts at the wrong end of the pack and often resort to using their teeth to tear open the condom pack. Using the teeth increases the risk of tearing the condom.
Last week I did a sensitisation for young boys where I live on the use of condom. None know about the need for the air space when wearing the condom nor did they know how to properly tear open the condom pack. They were not aware that using the teeth was wrong. 
As LeNNiB Champions we need to teach the basics – teach persons about appropriate placement of the male condoms.
David Ekpenyong Ita 
LEGALIZE ABORTION ESPECIALLY FOR RAPE SURVIVORS – David Ekpenyong Ita

LEGALIZE ABORTION ESPECIALLY FOR RAPE SURVIVORS – David Ekpenyong Ita

Rapists do not wear condom. Survivors of rape do get pregnant when raped. Pregnancy for rape survivors is unwanted pregnancy irrespective of age. Unwanted and unplanned pregnancy comes with multiple problems including the risk of mother to child transmission of HIV infection – the mother can get infected with HIV through rape and transmit HIV infection to the child. 
Sadly, about 34.1%  of sexually active women had their first time sex through rape. Also in Nigeria, rape increases the risk of girls to HIV. The mental distress associated with rape is not managed due to the culture of silence. This increases the high risk behaviour of rape survivors – unprotected anal and vagina intercourse, multiple sex partners, increased engagement in transactional sex. Rape survivor suffer depression, low self esteem. Sadly rape is not nationally recognised as a risk factor for HIV. This needs to change. The government needs to recognise rape as a risk factor for HIV in Nigeria and have a national response plan to manage rape as a HIV prevention and or treatment strategy just like mental health of people living with HIV is increasingly receiving attention.
One of the response strategy should include legalizing abortion for rape survivors. This reduces the risk of seeking illegal abortion as well as help survivors prevent the low self esteem, mental illness, depression and stigmatization resulting from unwanted pregnancy. All rapist should not be spared the 14 years imprisonment term. Imprisonment of rapist should be and advocacy agenda in all States in Nigeria. 
Advocating for a change in the Nigeria laws about access to abortion is a HIV prevention response. It is something we as advocates need to push for collectively in Nigeria.
PREP & PEP AVAILABILITY AND ACCESSIBILITY – David Ekpeneyong Ita 

PREP & PEP AVAILABILITY AND ACCESSIBILITY – David Ekpeneyong Ita 

 

We need to push for public access to both pre –exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP). People exposed to HIV infection risk through rape and unprotected sex should easily have access to PEP. Also, persons at risk of HIV infection like persons in HIV sero-discordant sexual relationships, female sex workers (FSW) who have multiple sex partners, male sex male (MSM) who are exposed to unprotected anal sex, and persons with multiple sex partners who do not use condom  can benefit from access to PrEP. 
Access to PrEP and PEP can significantly reduce the risk for HIV infection for persons at high risk for the infection. This also enables people living with HIV infection feel a lot more comfortable being open with their status knowing their HIV negative sexual partner can have access to HIV prevention tools that will reduce their risk of contracting infection. This should help reduce stigma associated with HIV infection.
We make a public call to HIV stakeholders to improve current access to PrEP and PEP in Nigeria. As advocates, we collectively ask for PrEP and PEP to be accessible in all health care institutions – especially primary health care centres that are closely located to people. Health care providers should have on the job training to promote access to PrEP and PEP.

DAVID EKPENYONG ITA.