학술논문

The Carletonville-Mothusimpilo Project: limiting transmission of HIV through community-based interventions.
Document Type
Article
Source
South African Journal of Science. Jun2000, Vol. 96 Issue 6, p351. 9p. 1 Black and White Photograph, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*HIV prevention
*GOLD mining
Language
ISSN
0038-2353
Abstract
For all of the last century, the economy of South Africa, and so also of its neighbouring countries, has depended on migrant labour from rural areas. This is particularly so for the mining industry, especially hard-rock mining, and this has led to a system of 'oscillating' migration whereby men from rural areas come to live and work on the mines, without their wives or families, but return home regularly. This pattern of oscillating migration is an important determinant of health and, especially at the start of the epidemic, contributed to the spread of HIV in the region. In this paper we describe an extensive, community-led, intervention designed to develop ways to manage and limit the spread of HIV in Carletonville, the largest gold-mining complex in the world. We first consider the political and economic context within which earlier attempts to develop HIV intervention programmes were made and then show how the Carletonville project was designed to go beyond these early attempts and avoid some of the pitfalls encountered then. The Carletonville project was based on a set of assumptions. First, that HIV should not be treated as another biomedical problem to be dealt with by changing individual behaviour but rather that it must be understood within the social, cultural and normative conditions that pertain in particular communities. Secondly, that in the short to medium term the most effective interventions would involve the treatment of sexually transmitted diseases and the use of community-based peer educators to promote safer sexual practices and the use of condoms. Thirdly, that for the intervention to be sustainable in the long term, it would require the full commitment of all the local stakeholders including the state, the private sector, the trade unions and local community-based organizations. Fourthly, that in order to understand the nature and pattern of the epidemic, to focus our intervention efforts so that they have the maximum effect, to make se... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]