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School-Based HIV Prevention

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1 School-Based HIV Prevention
Lessons from Impact Evaluation

2 Studies by Dupas (2009) Duflo, Dupas, Kremer, Sinei (2006)
328 primary schools in Western Kenya ~70,000 children total Test 4 different school-based interventions for preventing HIV/AIDS, and compare their cost-effectiveness

3 Intervention 1: Teacher Training
Train 3 teachers per school in 168 schools to deliver HIV/AIDS education Curriculum focused on abstinence before marriage (no condoms) Teachers encouraged to form health clubs All students receive HIV/AIDS education Trainers from ACU-MoEST, Kenya Institute of Education, International Child Support

4 Intervention 2: Reducing Costs of Education
Treatment: One uniform per student in Standard 6, and another after 18 months if they were still in school Each uniform costs ~$6

5 Intervention 3: Critical Thinking
“Active learning” approach Hold student debates about whether children should be taught about condoms in primary school Debates are part of government curriculum, but “intervention” in this case is encouraging a random sample of schools to hold debates Essay competition: How can I protect myself?

6 Intervention 4: Relative Risks Campaign
Trainers from International Child Support hold 40 minute sessions for 8th graders Students shown HIV prevalence in Kenya, disaggregated by age and gender Screening of a 10-minute video called “Sarah, the Trap” warning about the dangers of “Sugar Daddies” Group discussion about cross-generational sex

7 Prevalence Aggregated by Age
15-19 20-24 25-29 30-39 Female 22% 36% 35% 32% Male 4% 13% 28% Theory of Intervention: Girls will calculate the trade-off their partners’ wealth, and their risk of infection.

8 Multi-Arm Impact Evaluation: Visual Overview
Intervention 1 Intervention 2 Teacher Training Control Control Treatment Teacher Training+ Uniforms Uniforms Intervention 3 Intervention 4 Intervention 1: 163 of 268 schools received the treatment (teacher training). Intervention 3: the orange square represents 71 schools randomly selected to receive school debates(active learning) in addition to other conditions. Intervention 4: Green squares add Risk Reduction curriculum.

9 Outcomes for evaluation
Ideal situation: Measure HIV infection and risky behavior Try to avoid self-reports In reality: Measure childbearing rates (search and interview) Assess knowledge, attitudes, and practice through surveys No HIV and STI rates

10 Key results Teacher Training Critical Thinking School Uniforms
No impact on childbearing incidence Improves students’ HIV knowledge (Duflo 2006) If pregnant, more likely to be married Critical Thinking Increased knowledge & self-reported condom use No change in self-reported sexual activity School Uniforms Reduced dropout rates by 17% (boys), 14% (girls) Reduced teen marriage by 9% for girls Reduced childbearing by 12% Relative Risks 28% decrease in incidence of childbearing More self-reported sexual activity amongst boys No increase in pregnancy among teenage couples 61% fewer cross-generational pregnancies

11 Cost Per Pregnancy Averted
Teacher Training No evidence that it averts pregnancy Debates & Essays N/A Reduced School Costs $750 Relative Risks $91 * Estimates from Duflo, Dupas, Kremer and Sinei (2006) as well as Dupas 2009.

12 Cost Per Case of HIV Averted
Relative Risks Campaign $653 Treating other STIs* $213 Voluntary HCT * $537 Male circumcision * $ * Estimates from Gilson et al 2007; Thornton 2008; Gray 2007 respectively


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