Are schools a good setting for adolescent sexual health promotion in rural Africa? A qualitative assessment from Tanzania.

Mary L Plummer; D Wight; J Wamoyi; K Nyalali; T Ingall; G Mshana; ZS Shigongo; AIN Obasi; DA Ross; (2006) Are schools a good setting for adolescent sexual health promotion in rural Africa? A qualitative assessment from Tanzania. Health education research, 22 (4). pp. 483-499. ISSN 0268-1153 DOI: 10.1093/her/cyl099
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African adolescents are at high risk of poor sexual health. School-based interventions could reach many adolescents in a sustainable and replicable way, if enrolment, funding and infrastructure are adequate. This study examined pupils', recent school leavers', parents' and teachers' views and experiences of rural Tanzanian primary schools, focusing on the implications for potential sexual health programmes. From 1999 to 2002, participant observation was conducted in nine villages for 158 person-weeks. Half of Year 7 pupils were 15-17 years old, and few went on to secondary school, suggesting that primary schools may be a good venue for such programmes. However, serious challenges include low enrolment and attendance rates, limited teacher training, little access to teaching resources and official and unofficial practices that may alienate pupils and their parents, e.g. corporal punishment, pupils being made to do unpaid work, forced pregnancy examinations, and some teachers' alcohol or sexual abuse. At a national level, improved teacher training and supervision are critical, as well as policies that better prevent, identify and correct undesired practices. At a programme level, intervention developers need to simplify the subject matter, introduce alternative teaching methods, help improve teacher-pupil and teacher-community relationships, and closely supervise and appropriately respond to undesired practices.

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