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1.
Glob Health Sci Pract ; 11(Suppl 2)2023 12 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38110204

ABSTRACT

Integrated social and behavior change (SBC) programs seek to achieve changes in behaviors and norms across a range of health areas. Realizing changes across multiple behaviors is inherently complex and requires programs to be designed and implemented nimbly in ways that are responsive to feedback, new learning, and contextual shifts. Responsive feedback (RF) promotes just this kind of data analysis, use, and programmatic adaptation. Under the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)'s flagship SBC program in Tanzania, USAID Tulonge Afya, we applied FHI 360's SBC Adaptive Management Framework, which shares many similarities with RF. It includes meaningful engagement with an array of stakeholders throughout project design, implementation, monitoring, and evaluation (M&E); requires close collaboration between M&E and programmatic staff to ensure data collection and use are informed by and contribute to refinement of the project's theory of change; and incorporates purposeful, routine opportunities for learning and course correction. Accompanying the framework is a suite of tools and activities to facilitate systematic collection, analysis, and application of data for project design, improvement, and evaluation. Use of the framework within a complex, integrated SBC program improved our ability to address emerging priorities and achieve greater scale, saturation, and quality execution of activities. It also facilitated significant input from local communities and stakeholders-through shared data analysis and feedback loops-ensuring project activities reflected their strengths, needs, and preferences rather than the perspectives and biases of program implementers. In this article, we discuss the key components of the SBC Adaptive Management Framework and its commonalities with RF, how use of the framework and the underlying principles and elements of the RF approach contributed to the project's success, and share lessons that may strengthen and expand the application of RF and similar approaches within future SBC programs.


Subject(s)
Health Behavior , Health Promotion , Humans , Tanzania
2.
Am J Mens Health ; 16(2): 15579883221087838, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35333688

ABSTRACT

Evidence has demonstrated that immediate HIV treatment initiation upon a positive HIV test, referred to as Test and Treat, can help people living with HIV live longer, healthier lives and prevent HIV transmission. Although Tanzania adopted the evidence-based Test and Treat strategy since 2016, men were not being adequately reached for HIV services. A national campaign was launched to promote the new HIV services with a focus on men. To inform the development and implementation of the campaign, we conducted formative audience insights-gathering (AIG) sessions to assess facilitators and barriers to accessing HIV Test and Treat services and inform the concepts and materials for the campaign. Qualitative AIG interviews and focus group discussions were conducted with 54 people who were unaware or aware of their HIV status and currently or not currently on treatment, as well as health workers. Facilitators and barriers included a fear of testing positive, the desire to belong, control their narratives, and reinvent themselves to achieve their dreams and live a happy life. The campaign played off a My Happiness! creative concept to position antiretroviral therapy (ART) as a solution to fears around what life would be like after a positive HIV diagnosis. The development and implementation of the campaign were informed by the AIG sessions and national stakeholders, leading to strong partners' buy-in that supported the scale-up of the ongoing campaign from 12 to 26 regions via the collaborative efforts of government, donors, and implementing partners.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections , HIV Testing , Female , Focus Groups , HIV Infections/diagnosis , HIV Infections/drug therapy , Humans , Male , Qualitative Research , Tanzania
3.
Med Law Rev ; 25(2): 240-269, 2017 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28520960

ABSTRACT

Where the Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA) seeks to accelerate progress toward a world safe and secure from public health emergencies, the realization of GHSA 'Action Packages' will require national governments to establish necessary legal frameworks to prevent, detect, and respond to infectious disease. By analyzing the scope and content of existing national legislation in each of the GHSA Action Packages, this comparative cross-national research has developed a framework that disaggregates the legal domains necessary to meet each Action Package target. Based upon these legal domains, this study developed an assessment tool that can identify specific attributes of national legislation. This article applies this tool to assess the legal environment in twenty Sub-Saharan African countries, examining the content of laws across the GHSA Action Packages, analyzing the legal domains necessary to implement each Action Package, and highlighting specific national laws that reflect attributes of each legal domain.


Subject(s)
Bioterrorism , Communicable Disease Control , Global Health , International Cooperation , Disease Outbreaks , Humans
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