Drug users and female sex workers are among the groups most
vulnerable to HIV infection in Vietnam. To address the HIV epidemic within
these communities, former drug users and sex workers established the first
community-based organizations (CBOs) in 2009. The study provides a focused
assessment of CBOs’ expanding efforts to advocate for their members that
identifies existing collaborations with Vietnamese government programs. This
assessment explores the barriers to and facilitators of expansion in order to
propose recommendations to improve the working relationship between CBOs and
government programs.
Thirty-two individuals from drug user and sex worker CBOs (n = 24) and relevant government
programs (n = 8)
participated in face-to-face interviews in Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, and Hai
Phong. Coded interview transcripts were analyzed qualitatively concerning the
purpose of CBOs, the interactions between CBOs and government programs, and the
perceived barriers, facilitators, and feasibility of future CBO-government
program collaborations.
Services provided by the CBOs were considered to improve
members’ quality of life. The formation of coalitions among CBOs increased
efficiency in meeting members’ specific service needs, in addition to internal
capacity building. Government field staff interacted with CBOs by providing
CBOs with technical and legal support. CBOs and methadone maintenance treatment
(MMT) clinics collaborated to help the clinics meet patient enrollment quotas
and facilitate entry into treatment for CBO members. Barriers to CBO-government
program collaboration included perceived conflicting missions on how to address
drug use and sex work in the community, limited CBO-government program
communication, CBO mistrust of the MMT system, and lack of legal status for
CBOs.
To reduce these barriers, we recommend (1) introduction of
CBO consultative services at government healthcare centers, (2) enlistment of
CBO outreach to ensure full access to the imminent scaled-up MMT program, and
(3) establishment of standards by which CBOs can obtain legal status.
Full article
at: http://goo.gl/C6P4Ia
1Yale School of Medicine, New Haven 06511,
CT, USA
2Center for Supporting Community Development
Initiatives (SCDI), 240 Mai Anh Tuan, Ba Dinh district, Hanoi, Vietnam
3Yale School of Public Health, New Haven
06510, CT, USA
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