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Citation

Tumlinson, Katherine; Thomas, James C.; & Reynolds, Heidi W. (2015). The Effect of Women’s Property Rights on HIV: A Search for Quantitative Evidence. AIDS Care, 27(1), 112-122. PMCID: PMC4221482

Abstract

In recent years, efforts to reduce HIV transmission have begun to incorporate a structural interventions approach, whereby the social, political, and economic environment in which people live is considered an important determinant of individual behaviors. This approach to HIV prevention is reflected in the growing number of programs designed to address insecure or non-existent property rights for women living in developing countries. Qualitative and anecdotal evidence suggests that property ownership may allow women to mitigate social, economic, and biological effects of HIV for themselves and others through increased food security and income generation. Even so, the relationship between women’s property and inheritance rights (WPIR) and HIV transmission behaviors is not well understood. We explored sources of data that could be used to establish quantitative links between WPIR and HIV. Our search for quantitative evidence included (1) a review of peer-reviewed and “grey” literature reporting on quantitative associations between WPIR and HIV, (2) identification and assessment of existing data sets for their utility in exploring this relationship, and (3) interviews with organizations addressing women’s property rights in Kenya and Uganda about the data they collect. We found no quantitative studies linking insecure WPIR to HIV transmission behaviors. Data sets with relevant variables were scarce, and those with both WPIR and HIV variables could only provide superficial evidence of associations. Organizations addressing WPIR in Kenya and Uganda did not collect data that could shed light on the connection between WPIR and HIV, but two had data and community networks that could provide a good foundation for a future study that would include the collection of additional information. Collaboration between groups addressing WPIR and HIV transmission could provide the quantitative evidence needed to determine whether and how a WPIR structural intervention could decrease HIV transmission.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09540121.2014.947236

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2015

Journal Title

AIDS Care

Author(s)

Tumlinson, Katherine
Thomas, James C.
Reynolds, Heidi W.

PMCID

PMC4221482

ORCiD

Thomas, JC - 0000-0002-2225-2052
Tumlinson - 0000-0001-8314-8219