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AJPH First Look, published online ahead of print Jan 14, 2010
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Fred M. Ssewamala
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American Journal of Public Health, 10.2105/AJPH.2008.158840


Research and Practice

Effect of Economic Assets on Sexual Risk-Taking Intentions Among Orphaned Adolescents in Uganda

Fred M. Ssewamala 1*, Chang-Keun Han 2, Torsten B. Neilands 3, Leyla Ismayilova 1, Elizabeth Sperber 1

1 Columbia University
2 National University of Singapore
3 University of California, San Francisco

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: fs2114{at}columbia.edu.


   Abstract

Objectives. We examined the effect of economic assets on sexual risk-taking intentions among school-going AIDS-orphaned adolescents in rural Uganda.

Methods. AIDS-orphaned adolescents from 15 comparable schools were randomly assigned to control (n=133) or treatment (n=127) conditions. Treatment participants received child savings accounts, workshops, and mentorship. This economic intervention was in addition to the traditional care and support services for school-going orphaned adolescents (counseling and school supplies) provided to both treatment and control groups. Adolescents in the treatment condition were compared with adolescents in the control condition at baseline and at 10 months after the intervention.

Results. After control for sociodemographic factors, child caregiver/parental communication, and peer pressure, adolescents in the economic intervention group reported a significant reduction in sexual risk-taking intentions compared with adolescents in the control condition.

Conclusions. The findings indicate that in Uganda, a country devastated by poverty and disease (including HIV/AIDS), having access to economic assets plays an important role in influencing adolescents’ sexual risk-taking intentions. These findings have implications for the care and support of orphaned adolescents, especially in poor African countries devastated by poverty and sexually transmitted diseases.

Key Words: Adolescent Health, Global Health, HIV/AIDS, Sexual Health, Socioeconomic Factors







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