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The Center’s pilot studies include the following:
PI: Le Minh Giang
Co-PIs: Miguel Muñoz-Laboy and Richard Parker
Since the beginning of the epidemic in Vietnam, men have accounted for more than 70% of reported HIV cases, with the average age of infected men growing ever lower. Over the past twenty years, during the same period of time in which the epidemic has become more disseminated, Vietnam has undergone a complex set of rapid social and economic transformations that have changed Vietnamese men in many fundamental ways, including their life desires and aspirations. Little attention have been paid to understanding men as gendered and sexual subjects who are striving to live up (and negotiate) with socially and culturally proscribed ways to be men. Importantly, how new life desires and aspirations shape social and spatial practices of pleasure seeking among men in ways that might put them at risk is also not entirely understood. Towards the broad goal of developing better understanding of what places men in contemporary Vietnam at risk of HIV infection and what interventions might mitigate this risk, this pilot study seeks to:
The information generated from this study will be useful for further research and interventions to address HIV risk among men in Vietnam. Furthermore, they will also allow the research team to initiate dialogue with Vietnamese and international policymakers about the roles of men in the fight against HIV/AIDS in Vietnam and about mechanisms that promote resiliency and preventive action among men in adverse situations.
PI: Harriet Phinney
Co-PI: Khuat Thu Hong
The proposed pilot study will explore individual and family-level responses to ART, including the social determinants of uptake and the effects of ART on sexual strategies and the management of reproduction among couples in which one or both members use ART. It will also address clinicians’ perspectives on ART.
In the proposed project, we use two concepts – life projects and social risk – developed through previous multi-sited ethnographic research (which included one site in Vietnam) to understand how people engage with the availability of ART. Specifically, in the proposed project we will:
Vietnam, as a PEPFAR focus country, has been the recipient of a significant level of focused effort to increase the availability of anti-retroviral therapy (ART). As of November of 2006, about 5000 people were being treated nationwide. Emerging evidence from around the globe regarding sexual disinhibition, limited overall participation in VCT programs, gender differentials in access to ARVs, and continuing high transmission rates among zero-discordant couples suggest both that there are ongoing challenges to achieving universal access and that efforts to achieve universal access may have unintended (and in some instances un-wished for) consequences. Little is known, however, about how or even whether these same challenges are developing in the particular Vietnamese context. This pilot project will begin to fill a critical gap in the social science research on HIV by collecting and analyzing preliminary data about these social impacts of ART access. Attending more closely to the inadvertent results of scale up will increase the ability of the Vietnamese government to successfully achieve the clinical and public health goals of using ART to enhance population health.
PI: Ronald Bayer
Co-PIs: Claire Edington and Nguyen Thi Mai Huong
Ever since the first HIV case was reported in 1990, the public face of the epidemic in Vietnam has been dominated by male drug users. As of 2005, while HIV prevalence among adults aged 15-49 was estimated at 0.53%, this prevalence was 34% among male injecting drug users (IDUs) according to nation-wide sentinel surveillance. In some locations such as Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City and Quang Ninh province the prevalence rates are even higher. Although the share of drug users among people living with HIV/AIDS in Vietnam has declined from 75% in mid 1990s to about 50% in mid 2000s, reports from sentinel surveillance have shown steady increases in prevalence rates in this population, from 9.3% in 1997 to the current level of 34%. The increasing number of cases among married women and newborns which account for declines in drug users’ overall share in total cases are primarily due to marital infection and the resultant vertical transmission; to the extent that prevalence appears to be increasing among female sex workers, this is also largely due to injection-related risk. Injecting drug practices and risks, which have played an important role in shaping the Vietnamese epidemic, will likely continue to do so in the years to come.
The purpose of this study is to learn about the circumstances and processes through which globally-shared concepts transform policy and to understand how such policy is playing out on the ground, especially in terms of its implications upon individuals and communities. Broader implications exist for understanding the policy process in general, as well as the specific constraints on public health policy in countries transitioning from socialist to market-based economy and social governance. Towards this end, this pilot study has the following specific aims:
To use this case study to develop a deeper understanding of public health policymaking in a country transitioning from a centrally-planned socialist to market-based economy, with a particular focus on developing generalizable and testable propositions about the relative role of evidence concerning the limits and efficacy of specific intervention strategies in the adoption of those strategies.
STAR Partnership
Jennifer S. Hirsch
Department of Sociomedical Sciences
Mailman School of Public Health
Columbia University
722 W 168 St, 5th floor
New York NY 10032
Tel: 212 305 1185
jsh2124@columbia.edu