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Featured researches published by Ann Gottert.


BMC Public Health | 2015

A cluster randomized-controlled trial of a community mobilization intervention to change gender norms and reduce HIV risk in rural South Africa: study design and intervention

Audrey Pettifor; Sheri A. Lippman; Amanda Selin; Dean Peacock; Ann Gottert; Suzanne Maman; Dumisani Rebombo; Chirayath Suchindran; Rhian Twine; Kathryn E. Lancaster; Tamu Daniel; F. Xavier Gómez-Olivé; Kathleen Kahn; Catherine MacPhail

BackgroundCommunity mobilization (CM) interventions show promise in changing gender norms and preventing HIV, but few have been based on a defined mobilization model or rigorously evaluated. The purpose of this paper is to describe the intervention design and implementation and present baseline findings of a Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) of a two-year, theory-based CM intervention that aimed to change gender norms and reduce HIV risk in rural Mpumalanga province, South Africa.MethodsCommunity Mobilizers and volunteer Community Action Teams (CATs) implemented two-day workshops, a range of outreach activities, and leadership engagement meetings. All activities were mapped onto six theorized mobilization domains. The intervention is being evaluated by a randomized design in 22 communities (11 receive intervention). Cross-sectional, population-based surveys were conducted with approximately 1,200 adults ages 18–35 years at baseline and endline about two years later.ConclusionsThis is among the first community RCTs to evaluate a gender transformative intervention to change norms and HIV risk using a theory-based, defined mobilization model, which should increase the potential for impact on desired outcomes and be useful for future scale-up if proven effective.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT02129530


Journal of the International AIDS Society | 2018

Measuring intersecting stigma among key populations living with HIV: implementing the people living with HIV Stigma Index 2.0

Barbara Friedland; Laurel Sprague; Laura Nyblade; Stefan Baral; Julie Pulerwitz; Ann Gottert; Ugo Amanyeiwe; Alison Surdo Cheng; Christoforos Mallouris; Florence Anam; Aasha Jackson; Scott Geibel

Measuring intersecting stigma among key populations living with HIV: implementing the people living with HIV Stigma Index 2.0 Barbara A Friedland, Laurel Sprague, Laura Nyblade, Stefan D Baral, Julie Pulerwitz, Ann Gottert, Ugo Amanyeiwe, Alison Cheng, Christoforos Mallouris, Florence Anam, Aasha Jackson and Scott Geibel Corresponding author: Barbara A. Friedland, Center for Biomedical Research, Population Council, 1230 York Avenue, New York, NY 10065, USA. Tel: 212 327 7045. ([email protected])


Journal of the International AIDS Society | 2018

Community mobilization to modify harmful gender norms and reduce HIV risk: results from a community cluster randomized trial in South Africa

Audrey Pettifor; Sheri A. Lippman; Ann Gottert; Chirayath Suchindran; Amanda Selin; Dean Peacock; Suzanne Maman; Dumisani Rebombo; Rhian Twine; Francesc Xavier Gómez-Olivé; Stephen Tollman; Kathleen Kahn; Catherine MacPhail

Community mobilization (CM) is increasingly recognized as critical to generating changes in social norms and behaviours needed to achieve reductions in HIV. We conducted a CM intervention to modify negative gender norms, particularly among men, in order to reduce associated HIV risk.


Contraception | 2015

Influences on women’s decision making about intrauterine device use in Madagascar ☆

Ann Gottert; Karin Jacquin; Bakoly Rahaivondrafahitra; Kathryn E. Moracco; Suzanne Maman

OBJECTIVE We explored influences on decision making about intrauterine device (IUD) use among women in the Womens Health Project (WHP), managed by Population Services International in Madagascar. STUDY DESIGN We conducted six small group photonarrative discussions (n=18 individuals) and 12 individual in-depth interviews with women who were IUD users and nonusers. All participants had had contact with WHP counselors in three sites in Madagascar. Data analysis involved creating summaries of each transcript, coding in Atlas.ti and then synthesizing findings in a conceptual model. RESULTS We identified three stages of womens decision making about IUD use, and specific forms of social support that seemed helpful at each stage. During the first stage, receiving correct information from a trusted source such as a counselor conveys IUD benefits and corrects misinformation, but lingering fears about the method often appeared to delay method adoption among interested women. During the second stage, hearing testimony from satisfied users and receiving ongoing emotional support appeared to help alleviate these fears. During the third stage, accompaniment by a counselor or peer seemed to help some women gain confidence to go to the clinic to receive the IUD. CONCLUSION Identifying and supplying the types of social support women find helpful at different stages of the decision-making process could help program managers better respond to womens staged decision-making process about IUD use. IMPLICATIONS This qualitative study suggests that women in Madagascar perceive multiple IUD benefits but also fear the method even after misinformation is corrected, leading to a staged decision-making process about IUD use. Programs should identify and supply the types of social support that women find helpful at each stage of decision making.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Male partners of young women in Uganda: Understanding their relationships and use of HIV testing

Ann Gottert; Julie Pulerwitz; Godfrey Siu; Anne Ruhweza Katahoire; Jerry Okal; Florence Ayebare; Nrupa Jani; Pamela Keilig; Sanyukta Mathur

Background Substantial concern exists about the high risk of sexually transmitted HIV to adolescent girls and young women (AGYW, ages 15–24) in Eastern and Southern Africa. Yet limited research has been conducted with AGYW’s male sexual partners regarding their perspectives on relationships and strategies for mitigating HIV risk. We sought to fill this gap in order to inform the DREAMS Partnership and similar HIV prevention programs in Uganda. Methods We conducted 94 in-depth interviews, from April-June 2017, with male partners of AGYW in three districts: Gulu, Mukono, and Sembabule. Men were recruited at community venues identified as potential transmission areas, and via female partners enrolled in DREAMS. Analyses focused on men’s current and recent partnerships and HIV service use. Results Most respondents (80%) were married and 28 years old on average. Men saw partner concurrency as pervasive, and half described their own current multiple partners. Having married in their early 20s, over time most men continued to seek out AGYW as new partners, regardless of their own age. Relationships were highly fluid, with casual short-term partnerships becoming more formalized, and more formalized partnerships characterized by periods of separation and outside partnerships. Nearly all men reported recent HIV testing and described testing at distinct relationship points (e.g., when deciding to continue a relationship/get married, or when reuniting with a partner after a separation). Testing often stemmed from distrust of partner behavior, and an HIV-negative status served to validate respondents’ current relationship practices. Conclusions Across the three regions in Uganda, findings with partners of AGYW confirm earlier reports in Uganda of multiple concurrent partnerships, and demonstrate substantial HIV testing. Yet they also unearth the degree to which these partnerships are fluid (switching between casual and/or more long-term partnerships), which complicates potential HIV prevention strategies. Context-specific findings around these partnerships and risk are critical to further tailor HIV prevention programs.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Who are the male partners of adolescent girls and young women in Swaziland? Analysis of survey data from community venues across 19 DREAMS districts

Zahra Reynolds; Ann Gottert; Erin Luben; Bheki Mamba; Patrick Shabangu; Nsindiso Dlamini; Muhle Dlamini; Sanyukta Mathur; Julie Pulerwitz

Background Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW, ages 15–24) are at high risk of HIV in Swaziland. Understanding more about their male sexual partners can inform HIV prevention efforts for both. Methods Using the PLACE methodology across all 19 DREAMS implementation districts, 843 men ages 20–34 were surveyed between December 2016-February 2017. Surveys were conducted at 182 venues identified by community informants as places where AGYW and men meet/socialize. Descriptive and multivariate analyses examined characteristics and risk behaviors of male partners of AGYW. Results Men’s average age was 25.7. Sixty-three percent reported female partners ages 15–19, and 70% reported partners ages 20–24 in the last year; of those, 12% and 11% respectively had five or more such partners. Among the 568 male partners of AGYW, 36% reported consistent condom use with their current/last partner. Forty-two percent reported testing for HIV in the last year; 6% were HIV-positive, and of those, 97% were currently on treatment. One-third (37%) reported being circumcised; among uncircumcised, 81% were not considering it. In multivariate analyses, men who reported three or more AGYW partners in the last year were more likely to be HIV-positive (aOR 3.2, 95% CI 1.1,8.8). Men were also less likely to disclose their HIV status to adolescent versus older partners (aOR 0.6, 95% CI 0.4,0.9) and partners more than 5 years younger than themselves (aOR 0.6, 95% CI 0.4,0.9). Results also revealed relatively high unemployment and mobility, substantial financial responsibilities, and periodic homelessness. Conclusions Most men identified through community venues reported relationships with AGYW, and these relationships demonstrated substantial HIV risk. Challenging life circumstances suggest structural factors may underlie some risk behaviors. Engaging men in HIV prevention and targeted health services is critical, and informant-identified community venues are promising intervention sites to reach high-risk male partners of AGYW.


Global Public Health | 2018

Understanding men’s networks and perceptions of leadership to promote HIV testing and treatment in Agincourt, South Africa

Lauren M. Hill; Ann Gottert; Catherine MacPhail; Dumisani Rebombo; Rhian Twine; Kathleen Kahn; Audrey Pettifor; Sheri A. Lippman; Suzanne Maman

ABSTRACT Understanding informal leadership in high HIV prevalence settings is important for the success of popular opinion leader (POL) and other HIV testing and treatment promotion strategies which aim to leverage the influence of these leaders. We conducted a study in Mpumalanga province, South Africa, in which we aimed to: (1) describe men’s personal networks and key social relationships; and (2) describe the types of individuals men identify as leaders. We administered a structured questionnaire with 45 men (15 HIV-positive and 30 HIV-negative) in which men enumerated and described characteristics of individuals they share personal matters with, and people they considered as leaders. We further conducted in-depth interviews with 25 of these men to better understand men’s conceptualisation of leadership in their community. Family members were prominent in men’s personal networks and among the leaders they nominated. Men living with HIV were much more likely to know others living with HIV, and described friendships on the basis of the shared experience of HIV treatment. Future POL interventions aiming to promote HIV testing and care among men in rural South Africa should consider the importance of family in community leadership, and seek to leverage the influence of connections between men living with HIV.


Implementation Science | 2017

Evaluation of the Tsima community mobilization intervention to improve engagement in HIV testing and care in South Africa: study protocol for a cluster randomized trial.

Sheri A. Lippman; Audrey Pettifor; Dumisani Rebombo; Aimée Julien; Ryan G. Wagner; Mi-Suk Kang Dufour; Chodziwadziwa Kabudula; Torsten B. Neilands; Rhian Twine; Ann Gottert; F. Xavier Gómez-Olivé; Stephen Tollman; Ian Sanne; Dean Peacock; Kathleen Kahn

BackgroundHIV transmission can be decreased substantially by reducing the burden of undiagnosed HIV infection and expanding early and consistent use of antiretroviral therapy (ART). Treatment as prevention (TasP) has been proposed as key to ending the HIV epidemic. To activate TasP in high prevalence countries, like South Africa, communities must be motivated to know their status, engage in care, and remain in care. Community mobilization (CM) has the potential to significantly increase uptake testing, linkage to and retention in care by addressing the primary social barriers to engagement with HIV care—including poor understanding of HIV care; fear and stigma associated with infection, clinic attendance and disclosure; lack of social support; and gender norms that deter men from accessing care.Methods/designUsing a cluster randomized trial design, we are implementing a 3-year-theory-based CM intervention and comparing gains in HIV testing, linkage, and retention in care among individuals residing in 8 intervention communities to that of individuals residing in 7 control communities. Eligible communities include 15 villages within a health and demographic surveillance site (HDSS) in rural Mpumalanga, South Africa, that were not exposed to previous CM efforts. CM activities conducted in the 8 intervention villages map onto six mobilization domains that comprise the key components for community mobilization around HIV prevention. To evaluate the intervention, we will link a clinic-based electronic clinical tracking system in all area clinics to the HDSS longitudinal census data, thus creating an open, population-based cohort with over 30,000 18–49-year-old residents. We will estimate the marginal effect of the intervention on individual outcomes using generalized estimating equations. In addition, we will evaluate CM processes by conducting baseline and endline surveys among a random sample of 1200 community residents at each time point to monitor intervention exposure and community level change using validated measures of CM.DiscussionGiven the known importance of community social factors with regard to uptake of testing and HIV care, and the lack of rigorously evaluated community-level interventions effective in improving testing uptake, linkage and retention, the proposed study will yield much needed data to understand the potential of CM to improve the prevention and care cascade. Further, our work in developing a CM framework and domain measures will permit validation of a CM conceptual framework and process, which should prove valuable for community programming in Africa.Trial RegistrationNCT02197793 Registered July 21, 2014.


Aids Education and Prevention | 2017

Men’s perceptions of treatment as prevention in South Africa: Implications for engagement in HIV care and treatment

Alyssa C. Mooney; Ann Gottert; Nomhle Khoza; Dumisani Rebombo; Jennifer Hove; Aimée Julien Suárez; Rhian Twine; Catherine MacPhail; Sarah Treves-Kagan; Kathleen Kahn; Audrey Pettifor; Sheri A. Lippman

While South Africa provides universal access to treatment, HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy (ART) uptake remains low, particularly among men. Little is known about community awareness of the effects of treatment on preventing transmission, and how this information might impact HIV service utilization. This qualitative study explored understandings of treatment as prevention (TasP) among rural South African men. Narratives emphasized the know value of ART for individual health, but none were aware of its preventive effects. Many expressed that preventing transmission to partners would incentivize testing, earlier treatment, and adherence in the absence of symptoms, and could reduce the weight of a diagnosis. Doubts about TasP impacts on testing and care included enduring risks of stigma and transmission. TasP information should be integrated into clinic-based counseling for those utilizing services, and community-based education for broader reach. Pairing TasP information with alternative testing options may increase engagement among men reluctant to be seen at clinics.


Aids and Behavior | 2018

Gender Norms, Gender Role Conflict/Stress and HIV Risk Behaviors Among Men in Mpumalanga, South Africa

Ann Gottert; Clare Barrington; Heath Luz McNaughton-Reyes; Suzanne Maman; Catherine MacPhail; Sheri A. Lippman; Kathleen Kahn; Rhian Twine; Audrey Pettifor

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Audrey Pettifor

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Kathleen Kahn

University of the Witwatersrand

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Rhian Twine

University of the Witwatersrand

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Suzanne Maman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Catherine MacPhail

University of the Witwatersrand

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Amanda Selin

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Clare Barrington

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Dean Peacock

University of Cape Town

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