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Structural Barriers
and Facilitators in HIV Prevention: A Review of International
Research
Parker RG, Easton D, Klein CH
AIDS. 2000;14(suppl 1):S22-32
Objectives:
This article provides an overview of a growing body of international
research focusing on the structural and environmental factors that
shape the spread of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and create barriers and
facilitators in relation to HIV-prevention programs.
Overview Of Structural-Factors Literature: Most of the
research on structural and environmental factors can be grouped into
a small number of analytically distinct but interconnected
categories: economic (under)development and poverty; mobility,
including migration, seasonal work, and social disruption due to war
and political instability; and gender inequalities. An additional
focus in research on structural and environmental factors has been
on the effects of particular governmental and intergovernmental
policies in increasing or diminishing HIV vulnerability and
transmission.
Interventions: A smaller subset of the research on structural
factors describes and/or evaluates specific interventions in detail.
Approaches that have received significant attention include targeted
interventions developed for heterosexual women, female commercial
sex workers, male truck drivers, and men who have sex with men.
Conclusions: The structural and environmental factors
literature offers important insights and reveals a number of
productive intervention strategies that might be explored in both
resource-rich and -poor settings. However, new methodologies are
required to document and evaluate the effects of the structural
interventions, which by their very nature involve large-scale
elements that cannot be easily controlled by experimental or
quasi-experimental research designs. Innovative, interdisciplinary
approaches are needed that can move beyond the limited successes of
traditional behavioral interventions and explicitly attempt to
achieve broader social and structural change.
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