Adapting the deliberative democracy approach to LMIC settings: a case study in Nigeria
Laura M. Gaydos, Kabiru Salami, Wasiu Yusuf, Ifeoma Idigbe, Olutosin Awolude, Olabanjo Ogunsola, Tyree Staple, Priscilla Ezemelue, Oluseye Ajayi, Oliver Ezechi, Colleen M McBride, Lisa Flowers

TL;DR
This study shows how deliberative democracy can help adapt health programs in Nigeria by involving the community in decision-making.
Contribution
The study adapts deliberative democracy for health promotion in LMICs, specifically for an HIV peer program in Nigeria.
Findings
The community preferred group education and sample transportation by mentors for HPV screening.
Participants showed increased self-efficacy and satisfaction after the deliberative process.
Adaptations were necessary to align the program with cultural norms and logistical realities.
Abstract
Developing sustainable health promotion interventions in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) faces challenges due to limited infrastructure and diverse cultural contexts. Community engagement is essential for effective health promotion, but higher intensity strategies may be infeasible in under-resourced settings. This study aimed to adapt the Mentor Mother (MM) HIV peer program to include HPV self-screening for Nigerian women living with HIV using deliberative democracy (DD) principles. The study utilized a tiered DD approach to explore stakeholders’ perspectives on feasible and sustainable strategies for the MM program. The process included two tiers: an initial deliberation among the research team and a subsequent community deliberation. The research team deliberation involved online sessions to identify feasible program adaptations as well as a model deliberation process. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Media and Politics
