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Women Who Have Sex with Women’s Attitudes and Willingness to Participate in Future Female Same Sex Public Health Research: Opportunity for Disease Prevention and Control in Tanzania
Author(s) -
Switbert R. Kamazima,
Happiness Pius Saronga,
Saidah S Bakar,
Jackline V. Mbishi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
clinical immunology and research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2639-8494
DOI - 10.33425/2639-8494.1034
Subject(s) - tanzania , public health , qualitative research , context (archaeology) , stigma (botany) , medicine , environmental health , psychology , socioeconomics , nursing , geography , psychiatry , sociology , social science , archaeology
Recruitment of acceptable number of participants in a (public) health research with ‘hard to reach’/‘hidden’ populations is an old global problem, mostly challenging public health researchers in resource limited countries like Tanzania. Violence, stigma, criminalization of behaviors practiced by these groups, and potential participants’ suspicion toward the research and the researchers, further limit willingness to voluntarily participate. We conducted a cross-sectional descriptive and retrospective qualitative formative study with women who have sex with women in Dar-es-Salaam City region, Tanzania. The aim, among other objectives, was to understand women who have sex with women’s attitudes and willingness to participate in future female same sex public health research targeting this group. Findings indicate that all women we studied expressed willingness to participate in future health research targeting issues around female same sex relationships in the Tanzania context; an opportunity for (public) health professionals to prevent and control diseases in the country. To attain this goal, we recommend tailoring research protocols’ content, communication messages, and recruitment tactics to recognize, appreciate, and embrace the specific characteristics, backgrounds, and concerns of women who have sex with women in Tanzania.

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