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Adaptation and pre-test of a shortened Stepping Stones and Creating Futures intervention focused on HIV for young men in rural South Africa

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posted on 2025-08-01, 16:26 authored by A Gibbs, D Gumede, O Adeagbo, Y Sikweyiya, E Chirwa, S Mkhwanazi, M Luthuli, Z Xulu, C Herbst, T Zuma, S Hlongwane, N Okesola, J Dreyer, S Khaula, L Washington, M Shahmanesh
Men’s engagement in HIV prevention and treatment is suboptimal, including in South Africa. We sought to address this through adapting an evidence-based intervention, Stepping Stones and Creating Futures (SSCF), to strengthen its HIV content and provide a more scalable (shorter) intervention in rural South Africa. We then conducted a mixed methods pre-test of the intervention among young men aged 18–35 years. To adapt SSCF, we reviewed the current evidence base and worked with male Peer Navigators to update the SSCF theory of change (ToC) and manual. The revised intervention was ~45 hours (9 sessions) as opposed to ~63 hours and included a greater focus on HIV prevention and treatment technologies. Overall, 64% (n = 60) of men approached agreed to participate in the intervention, uptake (attending one session) among those who agreed was n = 35(58%) and retention (attending 6 or more sessions) was n = 25(71%). Qualitative data emphasized the intervention was acceptable, with young men describing it as something they liked. The qualitative data also broadly supported the intervention ToC, including the normalization of HIV in men’s lives, and the importance of health for men in achieving their life goals. However, it also highlighted the need to focus more on HIV-related stigma and fear, and the importance of HIV self-testing kits in encouraging testing. We revised the ToC and manual in light of this data. The adapted SSCF is acceptable and supports the ToC. Next steps is an evaluation to look at effectiveness of the intervention.

Funding

082384/Z/07/Z

5R01MH114560-03

MR/T025832/1

Medical Research Council (MRC)

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

South African Medical Research Council

Wellcome Trust

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© 2023 Gibbs et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from Public Library of Science via the DOI in this record Data Availability: All data are available via the AHRI data repository: https://data.ahri.org/index.php/home with access based on their guidelines.

Journal

PLOS Global Public Health

Pagination

e0001632-e0001632

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2023-02-27T08:55:09Z

FOA date

2023-02-27T08:57:47Z

Citation

Vol. 3(2), article e0001632

Department

  • Psychology

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