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Making the local count: social change communication and participation in HIV prevention

Introduction: Migrant and mobile seasonal farm workers face multiple challenges in preventing sexual transmission of HIV. They also fall beyond direct reach of district health promotion services and national HIV prevention communication interventions. HIV prevalence rates in rural farming communities are significantly higher than provincial averages. An integrated health promotion intervention was initiated in 2005 on commercial farms in Hoedspruit, Limpopo province, through the International Organization for Migration. In terms of HIV prevention the Hlokomela project’s key innovation was to employ a local process of participatory communication, with and within the farm worker community, in order to create a local context enabling of health promotion and within which efforts to prevent HIV could be more effective. The research sought to explore the social processes and actions related to the on-going process of dialogue at the core of the participatory communication process. The objective was to describe and analyse the role of dialogue during regular purposive face to face interactions with farm worker change agents, in promoting health and addressing vulnerability to HIV.
Method: The study population comprised Hlokomela coordinators, farm worker change agents (Nompilos and Gingirikani) and key farm stakeholders from the 59 partner farms. Research was conducted in Hoedspruit, at the Hlokomela Wellness Centre and on a partner farm. A grounded theory approach was used for sampling: participants were selected through purposive sampling for the initial study sample, and theoretical sampling for the balance. Data was gathered monthly, in three stages between August and November 2010, through: 10 semi-structured in-depth individual interviews; 5 focus group discussions, and observation of 2 monthly meetings and a special event organised by the change agents. Data was analysed using a grounded theory approach.
Findings: Farm workers perceive and experience the process of on-going dialogue in face to face interactions as being intertwined with other aspects of the intervention, in particular identification and action to enable access to health services. Hlokomela Coordinators guide and support the process as a means to empower a corps of primary farm worker Change Agents (Nompilos). Nompilos, in turn, apply the system to benefit and empower a wider group of farm worker as second level change agents (Gingirikani). Through this system farm workers have found ways to negotiate HIV-related stigma and cultural taboos on speaking about sex, and to address interpersonal tensions and violence, often gender related, on farms. They have come to consider themselves leaders and role models. Individuals have been enabled to define for themselves appropriate HIV-protective behaviours, and new HIV protective social norms which enable protective behaviours, have gained local currency. These norms include placing value on the opportunity and ability to communicate, to learn from each other, to develop different views, and to attain or protect family, physical and spiritual wellness.
Discussion: The process of engagement and regular dialogue, nested in processes related to the other elements of the projects, has positively altered the material, experiential and symbolic context on partner farms. It constitutes effective communication for social change, and has enabled health promotion, as described by the Ottawa Charter, to be realised. This demonstrates that an on-going, participatory process of local communication can create an enabling environment for health promotion. A community of communication practice has been developed in the farming community; this constitutes a reservoir of social capital and capacity to communicate and addresses the need for innovative communication in rural settings. A discursive space and public of discourse around wellness and HIV has been created, and new leaders and alternative narratives, which constitute self and collectively defined “AIDS competency” in a marginalised setting, are becoming visible, suggesting pathways for future interventions to enable equivalent responses in similar settings.
Conclusion: An opportunity exists to make more effective use of the power of face to face communication in defined local settings, in order to enable disempowered individuals to claim their human and health rights, to protect themselves from HIV, and to help activate and realise synergies in health and development objectives such as the Millennium Development Goals.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/12307
Date25 January 2013
CreatorsSimon-Meyer, Janine
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf

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