4.8 Article

Accelerating Sustainable Development Goals for South African adolescents from high HIV prevalence areas: a longitudinal path analysis

Journal

BMC MEDICINE
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12916-021-02137-8

Keywords

Accelerators; Sustainable Development Goals; Violence prevention; Adolescents; Parenting; Food sufficiency; HIV; AIDS; Child abuse; Social protection; Mental health

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [852787, 771468]
  2. UK Research and Innovation Global Challenges Research Fund [ES/S008101/1]
  3. Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Future Research Leader Award [ES/N017447/1]
  4. UK Medical Research Council (MRC)
  5. UK Department for International Development (DFID)
  6. Department of Health Social Care (DHSC) through its National Institutes of Health Research (NIHR) [MR/R022372/1]
  7. UNICEF Eastern and Southern Africa Office (UNICEFESARO)
  8. Oak Foundation GCRF Accelerating Violence Prevention in Africa [OFIL-20-057]
  9. Economic and Social Research Council (UK)
  10. National Research Foundation [RES-062-23-2068]
  11. National Department of Social Development
  12. Claude Leon Foundation
  13. Nuffield Foundation [OPD/31598]
  14. Health Economics and HIV/AIDS Research Division at the University of KwaZulu-Natal [R14304/AA002]
  15. John Fell Fund [103/757]
  16. Leverhulme Trust [PLP-2014-095]
  17. University of Oxford Impact Acceleration Account [1602-KEA-189, 1311-KEA-004, 1069GCRF-227]

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This study examines the associations between interventions and circumstances for HIV-affected adolescents, finding that positive parenting, parental monitoring, food sufficiency, and AIDS-free caregivers can significantly improve adolescent outcomes, with no gender differences observed. Combinations of these interventions can reduce risk by up to 40%.
Background Adolescents experience a multitude of vulnerabilities which need to be addressed in order to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). In sub-Saharan Africa, adolescents experience high burden of HIV, violence exposure, poverty, and poor mental and physical health. This study aimed to identify interventions and circumstances associated with three or more targets (accelerators) within multiple SDGs relating to HIV-affected adolescents and examine cumulative effects on outcomes. Methods Prospective longitudinal data from 3401 adolescents from randomly selected census enumeration areas in two provinces with > 30% HIV prevalence carried out in 2010/11 and 2011/12 were used to examine six hypothesized accelerators (positive parenting, parental monitoring, free schooling, teacher support, food sufficiency and HIV-negative/asymptomatic caregiver) targeting twelve outcomes across four SDGs, using a multivariate (multiple outcome) path model with correlated outcomes controlling for outcome at baseline and socio-demographics. The study corrected for multiple-hypothesis testing and tested measurement invariance across sex. Percentage predicted probabilities of occurrence of the outcome in the presence of the significant accelerators were also calculated. Results Sample mean age was 13.7 years at baseline, 56.6% were female. Positive parenting, parental monitoring, food sufficiency and AIDS-free caregiver were variously associated with reductions on ten outcomes. The model was gender invariant. AIDS-free caregiver was associated with the largest reductions. Combinations of accelerators resulted in a percentage reduction of risk of up to 40%. Conclusion Positive parenting, parental monitoring, food sufficiency and AIDS-free caregivers by themselves and in combination improve adolescent outcomes across ten SDG targets. These could translate to the corresponding real-world interventions parenting programmes, cash transfers and universal access to antiretroviral treatment, which when provided together, may help governments in sub-Saharan Africa more economically to reach their SDG targets.

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