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Published in: BMC Public Health 1/2022

Open Access 01-12-2022 | Research

Young people’s choice and voice concerning sex and relationships: effects of the multicomponent Get Up Speak Out! Programme in Iganga, Uganda

Authors: Tasneem Kakal, Christine Nalwadda, Miranda van Reeuwijk, Maaike van Veen, Lincie Kusters, Ophelia Chatterjee, Charles Owekmeno, Maryse Kok

Published in: BMC Public Health | Issue 1/2022

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Abstract

Background

Young people in Uganda face challenges in achieving their sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR), such as lack of information, limited access to services, teenage pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections. To address this, their empowerment – including their ability to express themselves and make decisions, is a key strategy. This study assessed how young people’s voice and choice concerning sex and relationships changed over the period of 3 years of implementation of the Get Up Speak Out! programme.

Methods

Data were collected through a household survey with young people (15-24 years) and through focus group discussions, in-depth interviews and key informant interviews with youth and community stakeholders in 2017 for the baseline and 2020 for the end-line. Using the difference-in-difference technique and thematic analysis, changes in key outcomes were assessed over time between intervention and control area.

Results

There were limited changes over time in the intervention area, which did not differ from changes in the control area. Young people were able to express themselves and expand their decision-making space on sex and relationships, in particular if they were older, male and in a relationship. Young women negotiated their agency, often by engaging in transactional sex. However, youth were still restricted in their self-expression and their choices as speaking about sexuality was taboo, particularly with adults. This was influenced by the political and religious climate around SRHR in Uganda, which emphasised abstinence as the best option for young people to prevent SRHR-related problems.

Conclusions

Young people’s SRHR remains a challenge in Uganda in the context of a conservative political and religious environment that reinforces social and gender norms around youth and young women’s sexuality. The limited effect of the programme on increasing young people’s voice and choice concerning relationships in Uganda can be understood in the context of a ban on comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) and the COVID-19 pandemic. These structural and emerging contextual factors enforce the taboo around youth sexuality and hinder their access to SRHR information and services. Multi-component and targeted programmes are needed to influence changes at the structural, community and individual level.
Appendix
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Footnotes
1
Straight Talk Foundation (STF); Restless Development (RD); National Forum of People Living with HIV/AIDS Networks in Uganda (NAFOPHANU); Reach a Hand Uganda (RAHU); Uganda Network of Young People Living with HIV/AIDS (UNYPA); Family Life Education Program (FLEP); Reproductive Health Uganda (RHU); and Centre for Health, Human Rights and Development (CEHURD).
 
4
In the intervention area, 44% of youth at baseline mentioned abstinence as one of the pregnancy prevention methods, and 10% mentioned it as the sole method. This increased to 54% and remained steady at 10% respectively. In the control area, this was 42 and 10% at baseline, which increased to 46% and decreased to 7% at end-line.
 
5
Prostitute—as mentioned in an interview with a key informant, HIV positive- according to field notes.
 
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Metadata
Title
Young people’s choice and voice concerning sex and relationships: effects of the multicomponent Get Up Speak Out! Programme in Iganga, Uganda
Authors
Tasneem Kakal
Christine Nalwadda
Miranda van Reeuwijk
Maaike van Veen
Lincie Kusters
Ophelia Chatterjee
Charles Owekmeno
Maryse Kok
Publication date
01-12-2022
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Public Health / Issue 1/2022
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2458
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-13919-x

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