Alison Surdo Cheng’s research while affiliated with United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and other places

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Publications (3)


Advancing the strategic use of HIV operations research to strengthen local policies and programmes: The Research to Prevention Project
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2015

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83 Reads

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8 Citations

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Alison Surdo Cheng

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Heena Brahmbhatt

In the field of HIV prevention, there is renewed interest in operations research (OR) within an implementation science framework. The ultimate goal of such studies is to generate new knowledge that can inform local programmes and policies, thus improving access, quality, efficiency and effectiveness. Using four case studies from the USAID-funded Research to Prevention (R2P) project, we highlight the strategic use of OR and the impact it can have on shaping the focus and content of HIV prevention programming across geographic and epidemic settings and populations. These case studies, which include experiences from several sub-Saharan African countries and the Caribbean, emphasize four unique ways that R2P projects utilized OR to stimulate change in a given context, including: (1) translating findings from clinical trials to real-world settings; (2) adapting promising structural interventions to a new context; (3) tailoring effective interventions to underserved populations; and (4) prioritizing key populations within a national response to HIV. Carefully crafted OR can bridge the common gap that exists between research-generated knowledge and field-based practice, lead to substantial, real-world changes in national policies and programmes, and strengthen local organizations and the use of data to be more responsive to a given topic or population, ultimately supporting a locally tailored HIV response.

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Figure 1. Map of West and Central Africa. 
Figure 1. Baseline HS score and difference three months after training (71 participants). 
Table 1 . Participant baseline characteristics 
Figure 1. RDS recruitment diagram from 338 MSM recruited in Blantyre, Malawi. Large nodes 0seeds; small nodes 0recruits; grey0HIV' according to Determine rapid HIV test; black 0HIV-on Determine rapid HIV test. 
Table 1 . Sociodemographic characteristics of a sample of men who have sex with men in Swaziland in 2011 

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The epidemiology of HIV and prevention needs among men who have sex with men in Africa

December 2013

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4,570 Reads

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4 Citations

While still an understudied area, there is a growing body of studies highlighting epidemiologic data on men who have sex with men (MSM) in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) which challenge the attitudes of complacency and irrelevancy among donors and country governments that are uncomfortable in addressing key populations (KPs). While some of the past inaction may be explained by ignorance, new data document highly elevated and sustained HIV prevalence that is seemingly isolated from recent overall declines in prevalence. The articles in this series highlight new studies which focus on the stark epidemiologic burden in countries from concentrated, mixed and generalized epidemic settings. The issue includes research from West, Central, East and Southern Africa and explores the pervasive impact of stigma and discrimination as critical barriers to confronting the HIV epidemic among MSM and the intersecting stigma and marginalization found between living with HIV and sexual minority status. Interventions to remove barriers to service access, including those aimed at training providers and mobilizing communities even within stigmatized peri-urban settings, are featured in this issue, which further demonstrates the immediate need for comprehensive action to address HIV among MSM in all countries in the region, regardless of epidemic classification.While still an understudied area, there is a growing body of studies highlighting epidemiologic data on men who have sex with men (MSM) in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) which challenge the attitudes of complacency and irrelevancy among donors and country governments that are uncomfortable in addressing key populations (KPs). While some of the past inaction may be explained by ignorance, new data document highly elevated and sustained HIV prevalence that is seemingly isolated from recent overall declines in prevalence. The articles in this series highlight new studies which focus on the stark epidemiologic burden in countries from concentrated, mixed and generalized epidemic settings. The issue includes research from West, Central, East and Southern Africa and explores the pervasive impact of stigma and discrimination as critical barriers to confronting the HIV epidemic among MSM and the intersecting stigma and marginalization found between living with HIV and sexual minority status. Interventions to remove barriers to service access, including those aimed at training providers and mobilizing communities even within stigmatized peri-urban settings, are featured in this issue, which further demonstrates the immediate need for comprehensive action to address HIV among MSM in all countries in the region, regardless of epidemic classification.


Building the evidence base for urgent action: HIV epidemiology and innovative programming for men who have sex with men in sub-Saharan Africa

December 2013

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68 Reads

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20 Citations

Abstract While still an understudied area, there is a growing body of studies highlighting epidemiologic data on men who have sex with men (MSM) in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) which challenge the attitudes of complacency and irrelevancy among donors and country governments that are uncomfortable in addressing key populations (KPs). While some of the past inaction may be explained by ignorance, new data document highly elevated and sustained HIV prevalence that is seemingly isolated from recent overall declines in prevalence. The articles in this series highlight new studies which focus on the stark epidemiologic burden in countries from concentrated, mixed and generalized epidemic settings. The issue includes research from West, Central, East and Southern Africa and explores the pervasive impact of stigma and discrimination as critical barriers to confronting the HIV epidemic among MSM and the intersecting stigma and marginalization found between living with HIV and sexual minority status. Interventions to remove barriers to service access, including those aimed at training providers and mobilizing communities even within stigmatized peri-urban settings, are featured in this issue, which further demonstrates the immediate need for comprehensive action to address HIV among MSM in all countries in the region, regardless of epidemic classification.

Citations (3)


... Similar findings were reported in a study in Kenya, where fear of abnormal screening results (22.1%) and lack of financial support (11.4%) were the most common barriers to cervical cancer screening. 16,17 Another study in China showed that anxious feelings of diagnosis (47.6%) and lack of awareness of screening benefits (13.4%) were significant factors influencing cervical cancer screening. 18 Association between level of knowledge and demographic variables: This study found significant associations between knowledge levels and demographic variables such as area of living, number of pregnancies, number of sexual partners, and previous history of screening. ...

Reference:

Assessment of Knowledge on Cervical Cancer among Women with a View to Develop Information Booklet
The epidemiology of HIV and prevention needs among men who have sex with men in Africa

... What was very noticeable during the literature search process is the spectrum, and multitude, of literature, that contains the words "Operations/Operational Research" in the title of a paper that outlines work done in Africa focussing strongly on health issues. Examples are the eradication of polio (Okeibunor et al. 2015) or combatting 1 3 HIV/AIDS (Kerrigan et al. 2015) in many African countries. These are just two examples but there are many. ...

Advancing the strategic use of HIV operations research to strengthen local policies and programmes: The Research to Prevention Project

... Second, there is a prominent research gap between high-income countries and low-and middle-income countries, especially some sub-Saharan countries where cultural context, social norms, as well as policies and legislation have interwoven a net of stigma and discrimination against same-sex behaviors and/or MSM (Itaborahy, 2012;Risher et al., 2013;Wirtz et al., 2014;Wolf, Cheng, Kapesa, & Castor, 2013). As MSM have been strongly marginalized or criminalized in these societies, it is not surprising that research and intervention efforts for this group are also limited. ...

Building the evidence base for urgent action: HIV epidemiology and innovative programming for men who have sex with men in sub-Saharan Africa