Faith leaders play critical role in shaping health behaviors and community attitudes toward early marriage, contraception, and Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination. Recognizing this influence, the project adopted a comprehensive listening approach to understand faith leaders' perspectives on these sexual and reproductive health issues affecting women and girls. Engagement across nine Nigerian states, we documented their values, theological positions, and concerns, enabling the development of culturally sensitive and theologically informed strategies for advancing public health outcomes.
Nigeria's Adolescent pregnancy rates of 106 per 1,000 girls, widespread early marriage, particularly in northern regions, persistently low contraceptive use, and suboptimal HPV vaccination coverage, despite approximately 12,000 annual cervical cancer cases. Faith leaders influence these outcomes through trusted community positions, shaping attitudes and either reinforcing or dismantling barriers to care.
112 qualitative interviews (39 key informant interviews, 48 focus group discussions, 25 avatar sessions), scoping reviews, media analysis, and WhatsApp surveys engaging nearly 4,700 respondents were conducted. Framework analysis ensured rigor through systematic triangulation. Findings reveal that early marriage remains culturally embedded, and growing recognition of its harmful consequences exists among faith leaders. Contraception attitudes vary significantly by denomination, with myths and doctrinal concerns prevalent. HPV vaccination acceptance depends heavily on trust, with leaders' endorsements significantly influencing uptake.
Project culminated in a validated Faith Leaders' Engagement Toolkit-the first evidence-based framework demonstrating measurable transformation pathways in Sub-Saharan Africa. This participatory model demonstrates that sustainable health improvements require partnerships honoring cultural and religious values while safeguarding health rights, offering actionable guidance for community-owned health governance.
Faith leaders play critical role in shaping health behaviors and community attitudes toward early marriage, contraception, and Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination. Recognizing this influence, the project adopted a comprehensive listening approach to understand faith leaders' perspectives on these sexual and reproductive health issues affecting women and girls. Engagement across nine Nigerian states, we documented their values, theological positions, and concerns, enabling the development of culturally sensitive and theologically informed strategies for advancing public health outcomes.
Nigeria's Adolescent pregnancy rates of 106 per 1,000 girls, widespread early marriage, particularly in northern regions, persistently low contraceptive use, and suboptimal HPV vaccination coverage, despite approximately 12,000 annual cervical cancer cases. Faith leaders influence these outcomes through trusted community positions, shaping attitudes and either reinforcing or dismantling barriers to care.
112 qualitative interviews (39 key informant interviews, 48 focus group discussions, 25 avatar sessions), scoping reviews, media analysis, and WhatsApp surveys engaging nearly 4,700 respondents were conducted. Framework analysis ensured rigor through systematic triangulation. Findings reveal that early marriage remains culturally embedded, and growing recognition of its harmful consequences exists among faith leaders. Contraception attitudes vary significantly by denomination, with myths and doctrinal concerns prevalent. HPV vaccination acceptance depends heavily on trust, with leaders' endorsements significantly influencing uptake.
Project culminated in a validated Faith Leaders' Engagement Toolkit-the first evidence-based framework demonstrating measurable transf ...
International Social and Behavior Change Communication Summit info@sbccsummit.orgProblemas técnicos?
Se estiver tendo problemas de reprodução, tente ajustar a qualidade ou atualizar a página.
Perguntas para o Palestrante?
Use a guia Q&A para enviar perguntas que poderão ser abordadas em sessões de acompanhamento.