Impacts of an HIV counseling and testing initiative -- results from an experimental intervention in a large firm in South Africa


Autoria(s): Arimoto, Yutaka; Hori, Narumi; Ito, Seiro; Kudo, Yuya; Tsukada, Kazunari
Data(s)

11/05/2016

11/05/2016

01/04/2016

Resumo

We have run experimental interventions to promote HIV tests in a large firm in South Africa. We combined HIV tests with existing medical check programs to increase the uptake. In the foregoing survey we undertook previously, it was suggested that fears and stigma of HIV/AIDS were the primary reasons given by the employees for not taking the test. To counter these, we implemented randomized interventions. We find substantial heterogeneity in responses by ethnicity. Africans and Colored rejected the tests most often. Supportive information increased the uptake by 6 to 16% points. A tradeoff in targeting resulting in stigmatizing the targeted and a reduction of exclusion error is discussed.

Identificador

IDE Discussion Paper. No. 597. 2016.4

http://hdl.handle.net/2344/1553

IDE Discussion Paper

597

Idioma(s)

en

eng

Publicador

Institute of Developing Economies, JETRO

日本貿易振興機構アジア経済研究所

Palavras-Chave #Diseases #Public health #Labor conditions #HIV #Stigma #RCT #Testing #Corporate setting #491.61 #FSSA South Africa 南アフリカ共和国 #I19 - Other #J16 - Economics of Gender; Non-labor Discrimination
Tipo

Working Paper

Technical Report