Title: Health Promotion and HIV
1Health Promotion and HIV
WA Centre for Health Promotion Research
2Health Promotion
Dahlgren, G and Whitehead, M. 1991. Policies and
strategies to promote social equity in health,
Institute of Future Studies,.Stockholm
3Organis - ational and systemic change
Community and social influence
Gay status non specific
HIV / HepC known
heterosexual men and women
Individual and group focused
4Organis -ational and systemic change
Marketing information to promote health
Community and social influence
Individual and group focused
Heterosexual men and women
Gay status non specific
HIV known
5Challenge of behaviour theory and risk practice
6Use of theory for multi level interventions
Examples of strategies
Ecological level
Useful theories / models
Change strategies
Change the environment
Change peoples behaviour
Adapted from Theory at a glance-National
Institutes for Health, USA
7Meanings of risk in HIV and health promotion
- Inaccurate and blunt use of models has often led
to an individualist and rationalistic view of
behaviour change. - This has been damaging to the HIV and HepC
response - Most behaviour that places people at risk is not
people setting out to take a risk.
8Risk Behaviour vs Practice
- People act with reference to meaning.
- For example..
- They do not engage in sexual behaviours eg
penis-in-anus, - they enact sexual practices they make love or
have a one-night-stand or get their rocks
off.
9Risk Behaviour vs Practice
- Sexual behaviour or injecting behaviour may be
reasonably similar across time and place. - Sexual or injecting practice is more fluid it
takes on a number of forms. - social and cultural - produced within a
particular time and place. - different in Australia from European or Asian
contexts. - it was different before HIV or HepC compared to
now
10Risk Behaviour vs Practice
- Risk behaviour is modifiable and is open to
intervention. - But we modify it by engaging with practices
11Risk Behaviour vs Practice
- We may be looking at reported sexual behaviour or
injecting behaviour as a measurable outcome but
it is the broader practices that we try and
engage / influence. - Requires a broad integrated approach that
understands and engages with the social /
cultural meaning - This is why active and genuine community
participation is so critical
12Role and need for genuine participation
13Community development and organisation in health
promotion
- HIV brought a revolution in the way affected
communities participated at all levels of public
health initiatives - Built on a range of human rights, gender rights
and social justice movements in the 60s and 70s.
14The Jakarta Declaration 1997
- Re-affirmed Ottawa Charter
- Equity
- Partnerships
- Settings
- Sustainability
- Participation
15The Jakarta Declaration 1997
- Participation is essential to sustaining efforts.
- People have to be at the centre of health
promotion action and decision-making processes
for them to be effective. - The challenge for the coming years will be to
unlock the potential for health promotion
inherent in local communities and society. - Capacity building and partnerships for
participation
16Greater Involvement of PLWHA (GIPA)
- In 1983, The Denver Principles
- a national AIDS conference was held in Denver,
USA. Positive activists announced a set of
principles that would revolutionise the way the
world responds to an epidemic. - standards for human rights and self-empowerment
in a health crisis. - 1994 Paris AIDS Summit Declaration
- Central role of people living with HIV in AIDS
education and care, and in the design and
implementation of policies and programs towards a
successful response to HIV/AIDS - Developed and debated further at a range of
international forums and events. - 1999 - From Principle to Practice Greater
Involvement of People Living with or Affected by
HIV/AIDS (GIPA)
171st Australian HIV/AIDS Strategy
- Firmly based within principle of the Ottawa
Charter - Some have argued this has been watered down to
some extent in subsequent strategies - Participation and community ownership in
particular
18Community participation
- The process of enabling individuals and
communities, in partnership with health
professionals, to participate in defining their
health problems and shaping solutions to those
problems. - (Rifkin et al., Wallerstein, Minkler, Roberstson
and Minkler, in Shediac-Rizkallah and Bone, 1998) - It provides the opportunity for ownership,
empowerment and self-determination those
difficult-to-measure intangibles that can make
the difference between long-term success and
failure - (Green and Kreuter 2005)
19Community organising and community development
- Community Development facilitate, encourage and
sustain a level of community action. Decision
making control is invested in the community, and
is driven from a ground up approach. - Community Organising has a more centralised, set
agenda approach, where the community is involved
in an already set health objective.
20A continuum of community participation
Rothmans model
Lower level of participation
Higher level of participation
Participation levels can vary throughout the
stages of program planning, implementation and
evaluation
COMMUNITY ORGANISATION
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
top down approach
bottom up approach
21Organising vs development
- Community Organising (Social Planning)
- attempts to solve community problems within
existing power structures - assumes that complex community change must be
guided by trained planners - tends to be task-orientated and expert-driven
- traditionally delivered by govt and non govt
agencies for the benefit of the community
22Organising vs development
- Community Development (Locality Development)
- community change is pursued through participation
of a wide range of people in determining their
own local goals and action - health promotion practitioner is more of a
facilitator, aiming to empower community members
(Egger et al, 1999)
23Organising vs development
- It is important to achieve the right balance
between the two, less initiatives become
irrelevant to the lives of the communities they
are for. - As the program is implemented, there is good
potential for a change in emphasis and approach
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25Overall comments
- Clear need for
- effective evaluation and development with genuine
participation - sharing of evaluation at the project and
programmatic level across jurisdictions - Evidence informed practice and practice informed
evidence
26Overall comments
- Community response to HIV has played a major role
in the development of Health Promotion and New
Public Health. - Demonstration that an integrated, participatory,
pragmatic and community driven response does
work, and works better. - Sustaining this is critical to the improved
health of PLWHA, PLWHepC and reduction of
transmission. - Also relevant to broader communities of health
and development, who often look to HIV to provide
leadership