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Risking it all for love? Resetting beliefs about HIV risk among low-income South African teens
- Source :
- Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization. 118:184-198
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Research suggests that the much higher HIV prevalence among young women in sub-Saharan Africa than among males of their age cohort is linked to the high prevalence of age-disparate sexual partnerships, and that incorrect beliefs about the relationship between age and HIV-risk are partly responsible. We report the results of an experiment that tests whether a simple, computer-based “HIV risk game” leads to better understanding of the relationship between HIV-risk and age among low-income South African adolescents than a version of the traditional “brochure approach” to dispensing information does. Our results are striking. The randomly assigned treatment group, which receives repeated doses of information about the link between age and HIV-risk as feedback to their own responses to simple questions about relative HIV-risk, is significantly more likely to correctly identify which of a pair of hypothetical men or women of different ages is more likely to have HIV than the control group. Subjects in the treatment group answer, on average, 1.65 times as many questions about HIV risk and age correctly as those in the control group. We also find that subjects’ (particularly female subjects’) beliefs about HIV risk among women are less accurate than their beliefs about HIV risk among men. Finally, a follow-up survey with no significant difference in attrition rates between those in the treatment and control groups, shows substantially higher information retention among treatment subjects than among control subjects.
- Subjects :
- Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
Economics and Econometrics
education.field_of_study
business.industry
Population
Developing country
Hiv risk
medicine.disease
Social class
Treatment and control groups
Cohort
Medicine
Attrition
business
education
Socioeconomic status
Social psychology
Demography
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 01672681
- Volume :
- 118
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........6c9a255984cf268d6fbac44a71889bf3
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2015.02.020