4 results match your criteria: "University of Cape Town Centre for Social Science Research.[Affiliation]"
PLoS One
April 2024
Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Indigenous and Northern women in Canada experience high rates of intimate partner violence (IPV), and this is particularly true in the Northwest Territories (NWT). Adolescents are also at increased risk of IPV, which has far-reaching, lifelong effects. Indigenous youth are particularly vulnerable to IPV due to ongoing effects of intergenerational trauma caused by colonialism, racism and residential school legacies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Structural interventions are endorsed to enhance biomedical and behavioural HIV prevention programmes for adolescents. Aiming to inform future interventions, we evaluated longitudinal associations between six structural factors and five HIV risk practices in a cohort of adolescents in South Africa.
Methods: We used three rounds of data between 2014-2018 on 1046 adolescents living with HIV and 483 age-matched community peers in South Africa's Eastern Cape (Observations = 4402).
Int J Circumpolar Health
December 2022
Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Indigenous adolescents in Canada are among those shouldering the impacts of colonialism and racism. Peer approaches and art-and-land-based programming have demonstrated promise to support empowerment and well-being, yet little is known about their efficacy with Northern and Indigenous adolescents in Canada or of how this group conceptualises empowerment. Fostering Open eXpression among Youth (FOXY) and Strength, Masculinities, and Sexual Health (SMASH) conduct land-and-arts-based Peer Leader Retreats with adolescents from the Northwest Territories, Nunavut and the Yukon Territories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Int AIDS Soc
May 2020
University of KwaZulu-Natal, Howard College, School of Nursing and Public Health, Durban, South Africa.
Introduction: Efficacious antiretroviral treatment (ART) enables people to live long and healthy lives with HIV but young people are dying from AIDS-related causes more than ever before. Qualitative evidence suggest that various forms of HIV-related discrimination and resulting shame act as profound barriers to young people's engagement with HIV services. However, the impact of these risks on adolescent retention in HIV care has not been quantified.
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