Evaluating the Impact of a School-Based Youth-Led Health Education Program for Adolescent Females in Mumbai, India.

Priya Shankar, Dana Sievers, Ricky Sharma
Author Information
  1. Priya Shankar: Department of Pediatrics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, US.
  2. Dana Sievers: Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, US.
  3. Ricky Sharma: Girls Health Champions, San Francisco, CA, US.

Abstract

Background: India's 120 million adolescent girls often have limited opportunities to receive health education, as health-related content in school curricula can be minimal, and the few existing external interventions for this demographic rarely cover multiple topics.
Objectives: This study conducted a program evaluation of Girls Health Champions, a school-based peer education intervention in Mumbai, India that educates girls about leading causes of adolescent morbidity and mortality, including nutrition, mental health, and sexual & reproductive health.
Methods: Female participants ages 12 to 16 in the eighth, ninth, and tenth standards were recruited at five participating schools in Mumbai, India to learn a multi-topic health curriculum from their peers, with a subset of ninth standard participants in each school trained as the peer educators. Using a quasi-experimental design, participant survey data was collected three times during the 2016-2017 academic year: at baseline, immediately following the peer-led education sessions, and five months following these sessions. Outcomes of interest included change in knowledge levels and health attitudes following the intervention, as well as retention at mid-year. An additional outcome was the change in self-reported leadership skills of peer educators before and after participating.
Findings: Compared to baseline, participants demonstrated statistically significant increases in knowledge levels (+48%, p < 0.001) and positive shifts in health-related attitudes (+42%, p < 0.001). These changes were maintained at mid-year (+29% for knowledge levels, p < 0.001; +37% for attitudes, p < 0.001). Findings were consistent when data was stratified by standard and peer educator status (peer educators versus non-peer educators). Peer educators also demonstrated a statistically significant increase in their interest in health promotion.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates the effectiveness of the peer education delivery model and finds school-based, peer-led programs covering a range of adolescent health topics can significantly increase knowledge and shift attitudes of program participants. Such benefits can accrue to both peer educators and non-peer educator program participants.

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MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adolescent Health
Anemia
Child
Curriculum
Female
Gender-Based Violence
Health Education
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health Promotion
Humans
India
Malnutrition
Menstruation
Mental Health
Peer Group
Program Evaluation
Reproductive Health
School Health Services
Sex Education
Teacher Training

Word Cloud

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