Facilitators and barriers to engaging with the DREAMS initiative among young women who sell sex aged 18-24 in Zimbabwe: a qualitative study

Author:

Machingura Fortunate1,Busza Joanna2,Madimutsa Gracious1,Makamba Memory1,Mushati Phillis1,Chiyaka Tarisai1,Hargreaves James2,Hensen Bernadette3,Birdthistle Isolde4,Cowan Frances Mary1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Sexual Health and HIV AIDS Research

2. Centre for Evaluation, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

3. Department of Clinical Research, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

4. Department of Population Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

Abstract

Abstract Background Adolescent girls and young women are at high risk of contracting HIV and exchanging sex for financial or material support heightens their risk. In Zimbabwe, the DREAMS initiative integrated education and employment opportunities within HIV health promotion and clinical services for vulnerable young women, including those who sell sex. While most participants accessed health services, fewer than 10% participated in any social programmes. Methods We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with 43 young women aged 18–24 to understand their experiences of engaging with the DREAMS programme. We purposively sampled participants for diversity in level of education, type and location of selling sex. We analysed the data by applying the Theoretical Domains Framework to explore facilitators and barriers to engaging with DREAMS. Results Eligible women were motivated by hopes of escaping poverty, and their longer-term engagement was sustained through exposure to new social networks, including friendships with less vulnerable peers. Barriers included opportunity costs and expenses such as transport or equipment required for job placements. Participants also described pervasive stigma and discrimination related to their involvement in selling sex. Interviews highlighted the young women’s struggles in a context of entrenched social and material deprivation and structural discrimination that hindered their ability to take up most of the social services offered. Conclusions This study demonstrates that while poverty was a key driver of participation in an integrated package of support, it also constrained the ability of highly vulnerable young women to benefit fully from the DREAMS initiative. Multi-layered HIV prevention approaches such as DREAMS that seek to alter complex and longstanding social and economic deprivation address many of the challenges faced by YWSS but will only succeed if the underlying drivers of HIV risk among YWSS are also addressed.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference36 articles.

1. UNAIDS. Women and HIV: a spotlight on adolescent girls and young women. 2019.

2. UNAIDS. UNAIDS Data 2020. Geneva: UNAIDS; 2020.

3. Sex in the shadow of HIV: A systematic review of prevalence, risk factors, and interventions to reduce sexual risk-taking among HIV-positive adolescents and youth in sub-Saharan Africa;Toska E;PLoS ONE,2017

4. HIV risk among young women who sell sex by whether they identify as sex workers: analysis of respondent-driven sampling surveys;Hensen B;Zimbabwe J Int AIDS Soc,2019

5. Programme on HIV/AIDS. Prevention gap report;UNAIDS;AIDS,2016

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