A critical reflection on the participatory action process involved in the development of a congnitive-behavioural based counselling intervention programme for youth living with HIV/AIDS in a rural South African town
Abstract
South Africa currently lacks HIV counselling interventions that are youth-specific and
that meet the psychosocial needs of young people living with HIV/AIDS. Indigenous
strategies and interventions need to be developed that cater for the psychosocial needs
of South African youth living with HIV/AIDS. By using Participatory Action Research
(PAR) a Cognitive-behavioural-based Counselling Intervention Programme (CBCIP) was
developed for use in a rural South African town. This article discusses the participatory
action process involved in the development of the CBCIP. It shows how PAR theory
relates to practice by highlighting the benefits, challenges and caveats in applying PAR
within a rural setting. The lessons that were learned in the development of the CBCIP
may provide future researchers with useful insight and foresight in the development of
HIV counselling interventions for young people living with HIV/AIDS in South Africa
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/17914http://arj.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/10/1/5
doi: 10.1177/1476750311414740
Collections
- Faculty of Humanities [2042]