HIV Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pathways Linking Poverty, Food Insecurity, and HIV in Rural Malawi
The purpose of this study is to evaluate a multilevel economic and food security program
(Support to Able-Bodied Vulnerable groups to Achieve Food Security; SAFE) in rural central
Malawi as implemented and assigned by CARE-Malawi on HIV vulnerability and other health
outcomes.
Hypothesis: HIV vulnerability can be reduced through a coordinated set of locally tailored
individual and structural interventions that reduces poverty, reduces food insecurity,
strengthens community bonds, and addresses gender inequality.
Purpose:
Poverty and lack of a predictable, stable source of food are two fundamental determinants of
ill health, including HIV/AIDS. Conversely, episodes of poor health and death from HIV can
disrupt the ability to maintain economic stability in affected households, especially those
that rely on subsistence farming. However, little empirical research has examined if, and
how, improvements in people's economic status and food security translate into changes in
HIV vulnerability.
The purpose of the SAGE4Health study is therefore to evaluate a large-scale economic
development program implemented by CARE-Malawi to examine mechanisms and magnitude of impact
on economic livelihoods, food security, and health. Specifically, the study aims to examine
how socioeconomic changes may affect vulnerability to HIV and other risks that can overwhelm
rural households in subsistence environments.
To contextualize the study location, it is important to note that HIV/AIDS, poverty and food
insecurity contribute substantially to morbidity and mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. The
Republic of Malawi, in southeastern Africa, bears one of the heaviest HIV disease burdens
globally. Poverty is endemic in Malawi; more than half of its estimated 15 million people
live on less than a dollar a day. Food insecurity, defined as having uncertain or limited
access to nutritionally adequate food, or being unable to procure food in socially
acceptable ways, is an aggravated problem in Malawi.
To better understand the context of HIV in Malawi, and to determine potential responses, it
is important to consider HIV within an ecosocial framework. Moving beyond the conventional
focus on proximal factors contributing to HIV vulnerability, like individual risk behaviors,
it is essential that interventions address poverty and food insecurity as interrelated
distal factors in the HIV pandemic, especially in countries like Malawi. Poverty has been
consistently recognized as a risk factor for food insecurity and HIV, and food insecurity a
risk factor for poor HIV-related outcomes.
Increasing critique has targeted the limitations of proximally focused HIV prevention
interventions and emphasizes the need for the development and assessment of complex,
multilayered structural interventions that address root causes and causal pathways linking
social, economic, political and environmental factors to HIV risk, and vulnerability in
specific contexts.There are significant gaps in knowledge, however, about the development,
implementation and evaluation of structural interventions. First, while integration of food
security interventions into HIV/AIDS prevention programs is essential to curtail the
HIV/AIDS pandemic and improve health and quality of life among those infected in
resource-poor settings, the literature has offered little guidance to international policy
makers, such as the World Food Programme. To our knowledge, there have been no published
intervention studies examining the impact of economic status and food security on HIV
outcomes in Malawi.
Second, complex multilevel structural interventions are expensive. Typically,
non-governmental organizations (NGOs), or government agencies implement them. The cost and
complexity of study designs that would adequately evaluate real-world structural
interventions do not align well with the typical NIH-funded randomized control trial (RCT)
model; this presumably could explain the dearth of research.
Third, major challenges remain in evaluating the impact of structural interventions. Few NGO
interventions are evaluated rigorously to rule out alternative explanations for success.
Perhaps most importantly, few NGO program evaluations involve a control group. Further, most
structural intervention assessments are limited to either structural variables on which they
directly intervene (such as social norms that condone intimate-partner violence or
microcredit program use rates) or key HIV health outcomes only. These research gaps in the
development, implementation and evaluation of structural interventions limit their wider
dissemination and scale-up in resource-poor countries, where services are much needed.
The SAGE4Health longitudinal study represents one of the first attempts to understand the
mechanisms and processes through which changes in food security and economic outcomes (i.e.,
income, household assets, livelihood options) can impact HIV vulnerability (i.e., HIV risk
behaviors, malnutrition, HIV infections). It also represents one of the first NIH-funded
studies based on an academic-economic development NGO partnership. This type of partnership
leverages strengths of NGOs (i.e., their ability to respond quickly to crises and their
capacity for large-scale, sustainable development work) and the excellence of HIV/AIDS
researchers' rigorous study designs and evaluations. In addition to examining pathways
linking distal ecosocial factors to HIV vulnerability, this study will provide important
information for understanding the impact of multilevel structural interventions on HIV with
the potential for sustainable long-term public health benefits. Finally, this collaboration
provides a unique opportunity to conduct a detailed study of a multilevel intervention on a
scale unlikely to be supported entirely by NIH research funding; in effect, we use the NIH
and NGO program funding to enhance both contributions.
Description:
SAGE4Health is a five-year academic-NGO collaboration evaluating the mechanisms and
magnitude of the impact of a multilevel economic and food security program (Support to
Able-Bodied Vulnerable groups to Achieve Food Security; SAFE), as implemented by
CARE-Malawi.
The study is being conducted in the rural areas of the Kasungu District of central Malawi.
Among Malawian adults aged 15-49, approximately 11% live with HIV. In Malawi, 74% of people
live below the international poverty line of US$1.25 per day. The Malawi economy is
dominated by the agriculture sector, which employs 80% of the population, accounts for 42%
of national GDP, supplies 81% of foreign exchange earnings and contributes significantly to
national and household food security. Aside from agriculture, Malawi's economy is also
highly influenced by foreign aid. Based on the World Bank Africa Development Indicators 2011
Report, the foreign aid accounted for 16.3% of Malawi's GDP in 2009. Given that Malawi's
economy receives substantial amounts of assistance, there is great interest from both donors
and the Malawian government to understand the types of interventions that effectively create
sustainable change in both the health and economic sectors.
(see intervention description for full details of SAFE intervention)
SAGE4Health Sample 1: Longitudinal, quasi-experimental, nonequivalent-control group design.
Objective: examine impact of SAFE intervention on economic status, food security, HIV/AIDS
vulnerability and other health-related outcomes at the SAFE program participants' level.
Sample: Participants (n =598) from three Traditional Authorities (TAs) who received SAFE
intervention (intervention group) are compared with 301 participants who live in three other
matched TAs (control group, matched on demographics and distance from an urban center) not
receiving SAFE. Quantitative data was collected in three waves: Baseline (during year 2009),
18-month, and 36-month follow up.
SAGE4Health Sample 2: Random sample community survey with a cohort sequential design.
Objective: check the possible threats (i.e., other external factors such as Malawi's
national fertilizer and seed programs that were introduced in the same period as the
intervention) to the internal validity of the intervention/evaluation by examining whether
the intervention effects were the results of something plausible during the study period, in
the larger communities where the intervention was delivered. Sample: 500 randomly selected
villages in SAFE TAs that were not direct participants in the SAFE program; 500 control TAs,
where the SAFE program had not been implemented. Quantitative data was collected in three
waves: Baseline (during year 2009), 18-month, and 36-month follow up.
SAGE4Health Sample 3: Series of in-depth qualitative interviews and focus groups conducted
18 months after enrollment near the end of SAFE program implementation. Objective:
understand SAFE participants' experiences in the program, their perceptions of its impact
and their perspectives on the phenomena. Sample: 90 individuals participating in both focus
group discussions and in-depth interviews.
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