Publication:
Acceptability, feasibility and potential of an intervention using secret Facebook groups to complement existing HIV prevention strategies among female sex workers in Cameroon, a randomized pilot study

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Vazquez Guillamet, Laia J.
Babey, Mary Mah
Njah, Mercy
Blake, Hassanatu
Jasani, Amy
Kyeng, Rahel
Hao, Jiaying
Long, Dustin
Tih, Pius
Turan, Janet M.

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Publication Date

2023

Language

en

Type

Journal article

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Abstract

This randomized pilot project evaluated an intervention promoting health care literacy around HIV, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), and stigma reduction using private social media groups that complemented existing HIV prevention services among female sex workers (FSWs) in Cameroon. The intervention was 12 HIV and sexual health videos tailored to FSWs that were released over 8 weeks through a secret Facebook group platform. In-person surveys were administered before, after the intervention, and three months later. No HIV seroconversions were detected; all participants completed follow-up and agreed to recommend the intervention to a coworker. Although the intervention was assessed to be acceptable and feasible to implement, poor internet connectivity was a key barrier. In time-series analysis, the intervention group participants reported improved PrEP interest, PrEP knowledge, and condom use along with reduced PrEP and HIV-related stigma, but no impact on sex-work related stigma or social cohesion. Similar results occurred in the control group. Cross-contamination and small pilot study size might have hindered the ability to detect the differential impact of this intervention. As communications technology increases in Cameroon, it is essential to learn more about FSWs preferences on the use of social media platforms for HIV prevention strategies.

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Source:

Aids Care-Psychological and Socio-Medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV

Publisher:

Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd

Keywords:

Subject

Health policy, Services, Public, Environmental, Occupational health, Psychology, Multidisciplinary, Respiratory system, Social sciences, Biomedical

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