Letting Them Die: Why HIV/AIDS Prevention Programmes Fail

Author:   Catherine Campbell
Publisher:   James Currey
Edition:   New ed.
ISBN:  

9780852558683


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   18 September 2003
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Letting Them Die: Why HIV/AIDS Prevention Programmes Fail


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Overview

South Africa has the worst AIDS epidemic in the world...this book highlights the barriers and constraints to controlling the crisis. In the old South Africa we killed people. Now we're just letting them die' - Pieter Dirk Uys, satirist Why do peopleknowingly risk a slow and painful premature death? People explain in their own words. There are interviews with migrant mineworkers, commercial sex workers and young women and men. Why did this 'gold standard' prevention programme have so little impact?BR> Free condoms, treatment for sexually transmitted infections and education and awareness programmes were all provided. If any intervention was to have had a measurable impact, this should have been the one. The author's experience is drawn from a period of five years. She writes vividly - evenat times in a raw manner. What are the lessons within Africa and across the world? The author, who is a social psychologist, has drawn on anthropology, sociology and social medicine. Her study is an early evaluation of what is becoming the standard HIV/AIDS intervention throughout Africa. In association with the International African Institute North America: Indiana U Press; South Africa: Double Storey/Juta

Full Product Details

Author:   Catherine Campbell
Publisher:   James Currey
Imprint:   James Currey
Edition:   New ed.
Dimensions:   Width: 13.80cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.288kg
ISBN:  

9780852558683


ISBN 10:   0852558686
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   18 September 2003
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

Campbell's thesis is that a complexity of multi-level processes influence HIV transmission and that, unless addressed, they hamper the most well-meaning efforts to dislodge the epidemic's grip. ... The old ways of understanding and responding to this epidemic have not gained us sufficient ground against it sufficiently quickly. There is much that can be learnt and applied in this thoughtful and challenging analysis. If we are to make headway against its ravages we must take this book seriously.' - Elizabeth Reid in ARAS Australia 'It took courage to document and write about such a failure in a world enamoured of best practices . ...Letting Them Die is a most useful, challenging, and thought-provoking book. It compels us to listen to people, think out of the box, looks for new practices (p. 195), and muster our drive and energies to design HIV/AIDS programmes that work faster than the epidemic.' - John F. May, The World Bank, in Population Studies Catherine Campbell's book is a superb analysis of community development initiatives and challenges surrounding HIV programmes. The material for this book is well researched and intelligently summarised. There are few books documenting the challenges of HIV programmes and 'Letting Them Die: Why HIV/AIDS Prevention Programmes Fail' provides an important and compelling contribution to this body of literature.' - Rebecca Tiessen in The European Journal of Development Research '...a forceful presentation of a theoretically well-informed and comprehensively researched critique of the participatory community development approach to HIV prevention. It will be valuable not only for those with a particular interest in HIV/AIDS management, but also for those with a more general interest in the possibilities and limitations of the partnerships and participation as community development strategies.' - Jo Beall in Journal of International Development 'This important book, which should be read by all in community-based work, describes a project that tried and failed to reduce the risk of HIV infection amongst three groups in a mining town in South Africa - female sex workers, male miners, and young people.' - Tony Klouda in Development & Change '...a painstaking and at times heart-wrenching account of how a well-resourced, promising initiative, with all the elements necessary for success, failed to produce results. As such, the study is not an indictment of community-based programming per se, but rather an example of how one method was tried and failed. ...the author takes a blunt, grave, principled and unflinching stand. By refusing to look away or overlook the Project's shortcomings, her book is a rare and positive contribution to the study of HIV/AIDS in the region.' - Glen S. Elder in African Affairs '...the best book yet written on the struggle to control HIV, from the perspective of a project that has tried extraordinarily hard to do so, but had modest success.' Alex de Waal, Times Literary Supplement 'The book is a major achievement, setting the standard for rigorous evaluation of planning and delivering HIV prevention. It should be required reading, not only for those with an interest in HIV prevention in southern Africa, but for all interested in developing or evaluating social interventions to promote health.' - Chris Bonell in Health Education Research 2005 'The majority of Campbell's book is written, however, to serve as a guidebook for anyone running or working in a health-related programme on a developing country. And some of its bleak assessments of the challenge facing South Africa are of universal interest.' - Claire Roberts Lamont in the African Review of Books.


Author Information

Catherine Campbell is a Reader at the London School of Economics, and an External Professor at the University of Natal.

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