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Cash payments reduce risky behaviour

Slumdwellers in the Kenyan capital Nairobi Manoocher Deghati/IRIN
Slumdwellers in the Kenyan capital Nairobi
Cash transfer programmes not only improve nutrition, education and health benefits for orphans and vulnerable children, but new research now suggest that these programmes can also significantly reduce risky sexual behaviour and HIV infection.

While the use of cash to improve health outcomes has long been established, not much has been known about its potential impact on HIV prevention.

A study carried out in Kenya examined cash transfers, part of the government’s social protection scheme, benefiting an estimated 102,000 households and 375,000 orphans and vulnerable children in 60 districts. The study revealed that children enrolled in the programme were 30 percent more likely to delay their sexual debut than those who were not enrolled. Among programme participants, the number of female adolescents who’d had two or more sexual partners in the last 12 months declined by 7.2 percent.

But the study also found that the cash grant did not affect condom use and that recipients were no more likely to use protection the first time they had sex.

“Our study is based on the Government of Kenya’s Cash Transfer for OVC [orphans and vulnerable children]. We find that those aged 11 to 16 at baseline were 7 percentage points less likely to engage in sexual activity 4 years later. Other studies have also shown a link between sexual activity and HIV-related behavioural risk and receipt of cash transfers, but those have been from small-scale experiments. Ours is the first study from an actual, scaled-up national programme,” Sudhanshu Handa, an associate professor at the University of North Carolina and one of the study’s researchers, told IRIN/PlusNews.

Under the cash transfer scheme, each of the targeted households receives a monthly stipend of US$25. There are, according to the government, an estimated 2.4 million orphans in Kenya - 48 percent of orphaned by HIV.

“A large-scale, national cash transfer programme may prevent HIV among adolescents by postponing sexual debut, reducing the number of partners and reducing the number of unprotected sex acts,” the authors concluded.

Reducing exploitation

Trephine*, a 15-year-old orphan who cares for her three siblings, says they have been able to stay in school because of the cash vouchers.

“I used to skip school to wash clothes for rich people so that they could pay me. My performance at school was bad because I wasn’t getting time to read. Now I perform better… Now when I am at school, I don’t worry about where food will come from. Some of my friends have boyfriends who give them money, and I almost did it but now I [don’t have to],” she added.

Without economic support, orphans and vulnerable children are exposed to exploitation. “This situation exposes the orphan and vulnerable children to different forms of abuse and exploitation; physical abuse, defilement, sexual exploitation, child labour and early marriages. This condition [reduces] their capacity to participate in matters that impact on their lives,” James Nyikal, permanent secretary in the Ministry of Gender and Children Services in Kenya, told IRIN/PlusNews

A similar study in Malawi showed that schoolgirls whose families received monthly cash transfers had a significantly lower rate of HIV infection than those who didn’t receive anything. Beneficiaries of the cash transfer project were also less likely to drop out of school, and teen pregnancies declined by 30 percent.

In Kenya, school enrolment among children benefiting from the cash transfer scheme increased by 8 percent, according to the study.

“We are…trying to understand how cash transfer affects risky behaviour, whether it is by keeping young people in school and making them more economically independent, by changing their peer group and social networks, or self-esteem,” Handa told IRIN/PlusNews.

*Name changed

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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