Cash Transfers, Young Women’s Economic Well-Being, and HIV Risk: Evidence from HPTN 068

被引:0
作者
Kelly Kilburn
James P. Hughes
Catherine MacPhail
Ryan G. Wagner
F. Xavier Gómez-Olivé
Kathleen Kahn
Audrey Pettifor
机构
[1] University of North Carolina,Carolina Population Center
[2] George Washington University,Department of Global Health, School of Public Health
[3] University of Washington,Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health
[4] Statistical Center for HIV/AIDS Research and Prevention (SCHARP),School of Health and Society
[5] University of Wollongong,Wits Reproductive Health and HIV Institute
[6] University of the Witwatersrand,MRC/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit (Agincourt), School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences
[7] University of the Witwatersrand,Umeå Centre for Global Health Research, Division of Epidemiology and Global Health, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine
[8] Umeå University,Department of Epidemiology
[9] INDEPTH Network,undefined
[10] University of North Carolina,undefined
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2019年 / 23卷
关键词
Adolescent girls and young women; South Africa; Economic empowerment; Cash transfers; Psychosocial well-being;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Despite the large interest in economic interventions to reduce HIV risk, little research has been done to show whether there are economic gains of these interventions for younger women and what intermediary role economic resources play in changing participants’ sexual behavior. This paper contributes to this gap by examining the impacts of a conditional cash transfer (CCT) for young women in South Africa on young women’s economic resources and the extent to which they play a role in young women’s health and behavior. We used data from HIV Prevention Trials Network 068 study, which provided transfers to young women (in addition to their parents) conditional on the young woman attending at least 80% of school days in the previous month. We found that the CCT increased young women’s economic wellbeing in terms of having savings, spending money, being unindebted, and food secure. We also investigated heterogeneous effects of the program by household economic status at baseline because the program was not specifically poverty targeted and found that the results were driven by young women from the poorest families. From these results, we examined heterogeneity by baseline poverty for other outcomes related to HIV risk including sexual behavior and psychosocial well-being. We found psychosocial well-being benefits in young women from the poorest families and that economic wellbeing gains explained much these impacts.
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页码:1178 / 1194
页数:16
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