Gender and the effects of an economic empowerment program on attitudes toward sexual risk-taking among AIDS-orphaned adolescent youth in Uganda

Fred M Ssewamala, Leyla Ismayilova, Mary McKay, Elizabeth Sperber, William Bannon Jr, Stacey Alicea, Fred M Ssewamala, Leyla Ismayilova, Mary McKay, Elizabeth Sperber, William Bannon Jr, Stacey Alicea

Abstract

Purpose: This article examines gender differences in attitudes toward sexual risk-taking behaviors of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)-orphaned youth participating in a randomized control trial testing an economic empowerment intervention in rural Uganda.

Methods: Adolescents (average age 13.7 years) who had lost one or both parents to AIDS from 15 comparable schools were randomly assigned to either an experimental (n=135) or a control condition (n=142). Adolescents in the experimental condition, in addition to usual care, also received support and incentives to save money toward secondary education.

Results: Findings indicate that although adolescent boys and girls within the experimental condition saved comparable amounts, the intervention appears to have benefited girls, in regard to the attitudes toward sexual risk-taking behavior, in a different way and to a lesser extent than boys.

Conclusions: Future research should investigate the possibility that adolescent girls might be able to develop equally large improvements in protective attitudes toward sexual risk taking through additional components that address gendered social norms.

Copyright 2010 Society for Adolescent Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

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Figure 1
Gender differences in attitudes toward sexual risk-taking behaviors

Source: PubMed

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