Sustaining HIV Research in Resource-Limited Settings Using PLAN (People, Learning, Adapting, Nurturing): Evidence from the 4 Youth by Youth Project in Nigeria.
Juliet IwelunmorJoseph D TuckerOliver EzechiUcheoma NwaozuruChisom Obiezu-UmehTitilola Gbaja-BiamilaDavid OladeleAdesola Z MusaCollins O AirhihenbuwaPublished in: Current HIV/AIDS reports (2023)
We describe PLAN or why people learning, adapting, and nurturing the core values of an intervention can enhance its sustainability over time. PLAN is a dynamic framework that simplifies the process of planning for sustainability of evidence-based interventions throughout the lifecyle of an intervention, taking into consideration the people that matter as well as the learning, adaptation, and nurturing involved with understanding and studying the interactions between interventions/innovations, practice settings, intervention fit, and the broader ecological contexts in which implementation occurs. We use case-study data from our ongoing pragmatic HIV implementation trial, the 4 Youth by Youth project, to detail the value and implications of why people learning, adapting, and nurturing HIV interventions implemented in resource-limited settings matter. PLAN is designed to further the dialogue on ways research and practice teams can critically work to ensure the sustainability of their evidence-based interventions from the onset, particularly in settings and with populations limited with resources. It also illustrates how attention to sustainability from the beginning may foster actions necessary for sustained program → sustained benefits → sustained capacity → sustained value, but in the absence of early and active planning, none of this will occur. Ultimately, we hope to accelerate the sustainability of evidence-based HIV interventions, and making a PLAN at the bare minimum may ensure that the goals of continuing and maintaining desirable features of any evidence-based interventions can be realized.
Keyphrases
- physical activity
- quality improvement
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv positive
- hiv infected
- hiv testing
- human immunodeficiency virus
- primary care
- randomized controlled trial
- healthcare
- mental health
- hepatitis c virus
- men who have sex with men
- young adults
- study protocol
- public health
- machine learning
- deep learning
- phase iii
- big data
- placebo controlled