Motivations, Facilitators, and Barriers of Donation-Based Interventions in HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infection Research: A Systematic Review
Dorian Ho, Ye Liu, Jamie Conklin, Thomas Fitzpatrick, Jiayu Wang, Suzanne Day, Takhona G. Hlatshwako, Rohit Ramaswamy, Ruby Congjiang Wang, Eneyi E. Kpokiri, Weiming Tang, Elvin Geng, Joseph D. Tucker

TL;DR
This review explores what motivates people to donate health services in HIV and STI research, how it helps, and what challenges exist.
Contribution
The study systematically identifies prosocial motivations and barriers in donation-based HIV/STI interventions using qualitative data.
Findings
Givers are motivated by altruism and a prosocial identity, which can improve health service distribution.
Social proximity between givers and recipients facilitates effective service distribution and peer relationships.
Secondary syringe distribution poses legal risks and may lead to unsupervised care.
Abstract
What are the motivations, facilitators, and barriers of prosocial behavior in donation-based interventions in HIV and sexually transmitted infection research? This systematic review of 27 qualitative studies of donation-based interventions, which included 1543 participants, found that givers leveraged altruism, agency, and relationality with recipients to improve distribution and use of health services in their social networks. Distributing or donating services to others could foster a prosocial identity that increased givers’ concern and responsibility for others’ health needs. Findings suggested that donation-based interventions could improve service uptake among marginalized populations using psychosocial assets already within those networks. This systematic review uses data from qualitative studies to identify motivations, facilitators, and barriers of prosocial behavior for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health
