August, 2016 - SUPPORT Summary of a systematic review | print this article | download PDF
Peer education uses individuals to convey specific information to members of a peer or target group with the aim of improving awareness or behaviours. Peer educators must share common key characteristics with those being targeted, but may either come from inside or outside the targeted group.
Key messages
Peer educators receive training related to the issue about which they are asked to educate others. Such educational interventions are based on the assumption that peers exert a strong influence on individuals’ knowledge and behaviour. In certain instances, peers are seen as more acceptable than outside professionals, particularly if sensitive topics are being discussed. It has been argued that peer education empowers both the peer educator and the target group, and is more cost effective than interventions that rely on professional staff. Peer education can also help to gain better access to hard-to-reach populations. Such advantages make peer education a preferred tool in HIV-prevention interventions, and it is often used to spread knowledge about sexually transmitted infections, raise risk awareness, and promote safe sex strategies, particularly the use of condoms.
This review on the impact of peer education on HIV/AIDS-related outcomes is one of a series of systematic reviews on behavioral interventions for HIV prevention in low- and middle-income countries.
Review objectives: To assess the effect of peer-education interventions on HIV knowledge, sharing of drug injection equipment, condom use, and sexually transmitted infections in developing country settings. |
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Type of | What the review authors searched for | What the review authors found |
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Study designs & interventions |
Peer education (the sharing of information by a peer in small groups or one-to-one). |
30 studies were found including 3 randomised trials, 14 cross-sectional studies, 10 before-after studies, and 3 non-randomised trials. |
Participants |
No restrictions. |
Youth (8 studies), commercial sex workers (12), injection drug users (4), transport workers (3), heterosexual adults (6), people in jail (2), and miners (1). |
Settings |
Developing countries (according to The World Bank). |
Sub-Saharan Africa (13 studies), East and Southeast Asia (10), Central Asia (5), Latin America and the Caribbean (2 studies). |
Outcomes |
Behavioural, psychological, social, care, or biological outcomes related to HIV prevention. |
HIV knowledge (26 studies), drug injection equipment sharing (6), condom use (29), sexually transmitted infections (11). |
Date of most recent search: November 2006. | ||
Limitations: This systematic review has important limitations. Only peer-reviewed journal articles were considered, and there were differences between studies with regard to outcome definition. |
Medley A, Kennedy C, O’Reilly K, Sweat M. Effectiveness of peer education interventions for HIV prevention in developing countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis. AIDS Educ Prev 2009; 21:181-206.
Thirty studies were conducted among different population subgroups including youth, commercial sex workers, drug injection users, transport workers, heterosexual adults, prisoners, and miners. The studies were conducted in sub Saharan Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean. The studies reported outcomes on levels of HIV knowledge, condom use, drug injection equipment use, and sexually transmitted infections.
Different implementation issues such as recruiting, training and supervision, compensation and the retention of peer-educators were reported in a subset of the studies. The described recruitment and training and supervision strategies were generally successful, and most programmes paid a small compensation fee to peer educators. Peer educator retention rates were reported to be low in most studies. However, this information appeared to be anecdotal and not collected systematically during process evaluations.
Peer-education interventions |
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People: Youth, commercial sex workers, injection drug users, transport workers, heterosexual adults, people in jail, miners. |
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Outcomes | Impact | Certainty of the evidence (GRADE) |
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HIV knowledge |
Across target groups: - Knowledge about HIV increased: Stratified by target group: - Knowledge about HIV increased (p<0.05) among all target groups except transport workers |
Low |
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Injection drug equipment sharing |
Sharing of drug injection equipment reduced: |
Low |
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Condom use |
Across target groups: - Condom use increased: - Condom use increased: - Condom use increased:
Stratified by target group: - Condom use increased (p<0.05) among all target groups except youth and adolescents. |
Low |
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Sexualy transmitted infections (STI) |
Across target groups: uncertain whether STI rates increased:
Stratified by target group: - STI rates increased among transport workers (OR 1.95; 95% CI 1.45 - 2.62) |
Very Low |
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OR: Odds Ratio; CI: confidence interval; p: p-value; GRADE: GRADE Working Group grades of evidence (see above and last page) |
Findings | Interpretation* |
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APPLICABILITY | |
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EQUITY | |
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ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS | |
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MONITORING & EVALUATION | |
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*Judgements made by the authors of this summary, not necessarily those of the review authors, based on the findings of the review and consultation with researchers and policymakers in low-income countries. For additional details about how these judgements were made see: http://www.supportsummaries.org/methods |
Related literature
Campbell C, Mzaidume Z. Grassroots participation, peer education, and HIV prevention by sex workers in South Africa. Am J Public Health 2001; 91:1978-86.
Campbell C, MacPhail C. Peer education, gender and the development of critical consciousness: Participatory HIV prevention by South African youth. Soc Sci Med 2002; 55:331-45.
Hutton G, Wyss K, N’Diekhor Y. Prioritization of prevention activities to combat the spread of HIV/AIDS in resource constrained settings: a cost-effectiveness analysis from Chad, Central Africa. Int J Health Plann Manage 2003; 18: 117-36.
Population Council. Peer Education and HIV/AIDS: Past Experience, Future Directions. 2002. Available at: www.popcouncil.org/pdfs/peer_ed.pdf
Strange V, Forrest S, Oakley A. Peer-led sex education - characteristics of peer educators and their perceptions of the impact on them of participation in a peer education programme. Health Educ Res 2002; 17:327-37.
This summary was prepared by
Peter Steinmann, Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Switzerland.
Conflict of interest
None declared. For details, see: www.supportsummaries.org/coi
Acknowledgements
This summary has been peer reviewed by: Caitlin Kennedy, Michael Sweat, Kevin O’Reilly, Chris Bonell, and Hanna Bergman.
This review should be cited as
Medley A, Kennedy C, O’Reilly K, Sweat M. Effectiveness of peer education interventions for HIV prevention in developing countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis. AIDS Educ Prev 2009; 21:181-206.
The summary should be cited as
Steinmann P. Is peer education an effective method for HIV prevention in low- and middle-income countries? A SUPPORT Summary of a systematic review. August 2016. www.supportsummaries.org
Keywords
evidence-informed health policy, evidence-based, systematic review, health systems research, health care, low and middle-income countries, developing countries, primary health care, peer education, effectiveness, HIV.