Bridges-Round 2: Evaluating the Long-term Impact of a Family Economic Empowerment Intervention on HIV Risk Prevention and Care Continuum Outcomes among Orphaned Youth Transitioning to Young Adulthood
Project Number5R01MH128232-03
Former Number1R01MH128232-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderSSEWAMALA, FRED M Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationWASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT ABSTRACT
Globally, adolescents and young adults (AYA; ages 14-29) represent 30% of HIV incidence cases among
persons of reproductive age, with ~75% occurring in Sub Saharan Africa (SSA). HIV incidence rises rapidly in
SSA, as AYA leave school (often prematurely) and migrate for work and marriage. Older adolescents are more
likely to experiment with health compromising behaviors that increase their vulnerability to HIV and sexually
transmitted infections (STIs). Young people orphaned by AIDS [YPoAIDS]), 80% of which live in SSA represent
a particularly vulnerable and unique population. Most YPoAIDS in SSA experience immense hardships, including
higher rates of HIV risk behavior and odds of HIV infection. These adversities cumulatively disrupt the
developmental milestones for YPoAIDS and can compromise their health and emotional wellbeing. Notably, our
team has had great success with implementing a 6-year, three-armed RCT that tested a family-based economic
intervention, Bridges (R01HD070727), among 1,383 primary school going adolescents in rural Uganda (10-14
years of age at enrollment) who lost one or both parents to AIDS. With over 90% retention rate over a 6-year
period (2012-2018), our findings show efficacy of this contextually-driven intervention significantly improving
sexual health, school retention and performance, and mental health. Yet, two critical policy and programming
questions related to HIV prevention and engagement in care continuum remain unaddressed: 1) longer-term
effectiveness of Bridges across YPoAIDS’s life course is currently unknown but critically important because of
unique vulnerabilities during the transition into young adulthood; and 2) self-reports of sexual health are
unreliable, hence the need to integrate biomarkers to provide the most precise results of these highly relevant
(but currently unknown) sexual health outcomes among our participants. Thus, the specific aims of the Bridges-
Round 2 study are: Aim 1. Examine the long-term impact of Bridges on: HIV prevalence (measured via
participant’s HIV status) (Primary outcome); and b) Explore in secondary analyses the long-term impact of
Bridges on key developmental and behavioral outcomes (e.g., mental health, alcohol and drug misuse); Aim 2.
Elucidate the long-term effects of Bridges on potential mechanisms of change, including: a) economic stability,
viral suppression (for ALHIV); PrEP use (for HIV negative adolescents), medical male circumcision (for boys);
and b) young adult transitions; Aim 3: Qualitatively investigate participants’ experiences with Bridges that may
have influenced engagement with the program, sexual risk-taking decisions, financial behaviors; experiences
with developmental transitions; and perceptions on program sustainability; Aim 4: To assess the long-term costs
and benefits of Bridges using formal economic evaluation. Our long-term goal is to translate knowledge into
sustainable, theoretically-guided prevention and treatment efforts that promote the wellbeing of AYA affected by
HIV/AIDS across the life course, in low-resource settings.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
As youth, especially those orphaned by HIV/AIDS, transition into young adulthood, they are faced with limited
social support and opportunities for education and employment, which elevates their vulnerability to poverty,
poor mental health functioning and other negative life outcomes, including risk-taking behaviors exposing them
to HIV/AIDS and poor health outcomes. The proposed Bridges-Round 2 study will extend the recently completed
efficacious Bridges to the Future study to examine the longitudinal impact of a family-based economic
empowerment intervention on the developmental and behavioral health outcomes, and transition milestones for
young people orphaned by AIDS in Uganda. Findings from this large longitudinal dataset may contribute to the
scientific knowledge on the potential value of investing modest economic resources in poor and vulnerable boys
and girls during early adolescence and how these resources may offer long-term protection against known HIV
and mental health risks—two public health issues impacting millions of young people in low-resource
communities.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
14 year old16 year oldAIDS preventionAcquired Immunodeficiency SyndromeAdolescentAdolescent and Young AdultAffectAfrica South of the SaharaAgeAlcoholsBehaviorBiological MarkersCaringChildhoodContinuity of Patient CareCost-Benefit AnalysisCosts and BenefitsDataDevelopmentEconomicsEducationEffectivenessEmploymentEnrollmentFamilyFutureGoalsGuide preventionHIVHIV InfectionsHIV SeronegativityHIV anti-retroviralHIV riskHIV-infected adolescentsHIV/AIDSHealthHealth behaviorHomeHuman immunodeficiency virus testIncidenceInterventionInvestmentsKnowledgeLifeLife Cycle StagesLong-Term EffectsMale CircumcisionMarriageMeasuresMedicalMental HealthOutcomeParentsParticipantPatient Self-ReportPerceptionPerformancePersonal SatisfactionPersonsPoliciesPopulationPovertyPrevalencePreventionPrimary SchoolsProgram SustainabilityPublic HealthResearchResource-limited settingResourcesRiskRisk BehaviorsRisk TakingRuralSchoolsSex BehaviorSexual HealthSexually Transmitted DiseasesSocial ControlsSocial supportTestingTranslatingUgandaUnited States National Institutes of HealthViralViral Load resultWell in selfWorkYouthadverse childhood eventsage groupalcohol misuseantiretroviral therapybehavioral healthbehavioral outcomeboyscohortcostdrug misuseearly adolescenceeconomic evaluationempowermentexperienceexperimental studygirlsimprovedinnovationlongitudinal datasetmigrationpoor health outcomepre-exposure prophylaxisprematureprimary outcomeprogramsreproductiveresponseretention ratescale upsecondary analysissexual risk behaviorsexual risk takingsocial disparitiessocial stigmasuccesstherapy adherencetreatment adherenceyoung adult
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