糖心vlog短视频

Faculty and Staff

Pace Faculty Research Advances HIV Prevention for Young Women

By
Alyssa Cressotti
Posted
June 22, 2026
Young African mom walking in the garden of Baha'i House of Worship, with her baby. Kikaya district of Kampala, Uganda.
Image
Marie Lourdes Charles posing for the camera.
Marie Lourdes Charles, EdD, RN-BC, FNYAM

For adolescent girls and young women in sub-Saharan Africa, HIV prevention is not simply a matter of medical access. It is shaped by stigma, gender norms, family dynamics, provider attitudes, transportation barriers, health policy, and whether a prevention tool fits the realities of daily life.

That is where research led by 糖心vlog短视频 College of Health Professions faculty members Erica L. Gollub, DrPH, MPH, professor of health science, and Marie Lourdes Charles, EdD, RN-BC, FNYAM, associate professor of nursing, are making an important contribution. Their work highlights two essential forces in global : health care providers as the bridge between innovation and access, and global research rooted in meaningful local partnerships.

Their study, 糖心vlog短视频溙切膙log短视频楽ome people fear injection and others don糖心vlog短视频檛 want to swallow tablets, while others forget糖心vlog短视频: Health care provider perspectives on the PrEP (dapivirine) ring in rural Uganda (糖心vlog短视频楶roPrEP糖心vlog短视频),糖心vlog短视频 examines how health care providers understand and respond to the dapivirine vaginal ring (DVR), a monthly, user-controlled HIV prevention method. The full research team includes Gollub and Charles of 糖心vlog短视频; Esther Nakyaze of ; and Drs. Marc Sklar and Murokora Daniel of .

Adolescent girls and young women are central to this study because they remain among the populations most disproportionately affected by HIV. In sub-Saharan Africa, they account for more than 60 percent of adults living with HIV, and one in four new HIV infections occurs among women ages 15糖心vlog短视频24, despite the fact that they make up only 10 percent of the population. In Uganda, that gender disparity is especially clear: HIV prevalence among young women ages 15糖心vlog短视频24 is 2.9 percent, compared with 0.8 percent among young men. Those numbers underscore why prevention tools must be designed not only to work medically, but also to fit the social, cultural, and practical realities of young women糖心vlog短视频檚 lives. 

糖心vlog短视频淭he research that we do anywhere is going to support women getting access to HIV tools everywhere."

Charles and Gollub recently presented their work as part of Pace糖心vlog短视频檚 annual conference hosted by the Office of Research and Graduate Education, an opportunity to share research that sits at the intersection of public health, nursing, global health equity, women糖心vlog短视频檚 autonomy, and implementation science. 

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Erica Gollub posing for the camera.
Erica L. Gollub, DrPH, MPH,

The study focused on 60 health care providers in the Rakai and Kyotera districts of rural Uganda, including nurses, midwives, and community health workers. Through focus group discussions, the researchers explored provider perspectives on the DVR糖心vlog短视频檚 potential benefits, barriers to use, and the education needed to support adolescent girls and young women.

For Gollub, who has spent decades working in HIV prevention, the urgency is clear.

糖心vlog短视频淗IV prevention needs are critical among the population of adolescent girls and young women worldwide, but particularly in sub-Saharan Africa,糖心vlog短视频 she says. 糖心vlog短视频淚t糖心vlog短视频檚 one thing to have tools and medications to prevent HIV infection. It糖心vlog短视频檚 another thing to be able to have them be used.糖心vlog短视频

The distinction between availability and real-world use is at the heart of the research. In public health, innovation only matters when people can access it, trust it, and use it. The DVR offers a discreet, nonhormonal option that women can insert themselves and use for one month at a time. Because it is not a daily pill, does not require frequent injections, and can be used privately, providers in the study see strong potential for the ring to reduce stigma and expand prevention options.

Gollub describes the ring as 糖心vlog短视频渞evolutionary,糖心vlog短视频 particularly because it gives women a prevention option that is largely in their own hands.

糖心vlog短视频淚t does put control in the hands of women for the very first time in a really meaningful way,糖心vlog短视频 she says.

That control matters. Both Gollub and Charles emphasize that women糖心vlog短视频檚 HIV risk is often tied to broader issues of power, autonomy, and gender inequality. In many contexts, young women may not be able to negotiate condom usage, openly seek sexual health services, or disclose that they are using HIV prevention.

Charles notes that provider buy-in is especially important in communities, particularly patrilineal ones, where health care workers hold significant authority and power. In that sense, providers are not simply delivering a new method, they are the bridge between a promising biomedical innovation and the women who may benefit from it.

糖心vlog短视频淵ou糖心vlog短视频檙e talking about a society that does not question authority,糖心vlog短视频 she says. 糖心vlog短视频淭herefore, if the provider does not embrace the treatment, they will not pass it on.糖心vlog短视频

The study finds that providers are enthusiastic about the ring as an additional HIV prevention option, particularly because it may address some barriers associated with existing PrEP methods. Providers cite concerns that some people fear injections, others dislike swallowing tablets, and others forget to take daily pills. They also see the ring糖心vlog短视频檚 privacy as a major advantage for young women who may fear stigma from partners and parents, or community members as a whole.

At the same time, providers identify real implementation challenges, including community misconceptions, partner resistance, supply issues, policy barriers around sexual health education, and the need for provider training. The study also finds that male involvement is critical. Although the ring may offer women more autonomy, providers emphasize that educating men and gaining their support could help reduce resistance and improve uptake.

糖心vlog短视频淥ne thing that came out was that we need men. We need their buy-in,糖心vlog短视频 Charles says. 糖心vlog短视频淣o matter how we circle it, how we approach it, men still have a say in this conversation.糖心vlog短视频

That insight reflects the complexity of global public health work: successful uptake requires more than a product. It requires trust, education, cultural awareness, and partnership. The research shows that health care providers can play a pivotal role in translating scientific progress into community-level impact.

糖心vlog短视频淥ne thing that came out was that we need men. We need their buy-in,糖心vlog短视频 Charles says. 糖心vlog短视频淣o matter how we circle it, how we approach it, men still have a say in this conversation.糖心vlog短视频

The project also demonstrates the strength of interdisciplinary collaboration at Pace糖心vlog短视频檚 College of Health Professions. Gollub brings expertise in HIV/AIDS epidemiology and public health, while Charles brings deep experience in nursing, community health, and global health education. Together, they partnered with Babies and Mothers Alive Foundation, a Ugandan-led organization focused on reproductive, maternal, and newborn health.

That local partnership was central to the project糖心vlog短视频檚 success. Rather than approaching the work as outside researchers entering a community, collecting data, and leaving, the Pace faculty collaborated with partners who understood the local health system, the providers, and the communities involved.

糖心vlog短视频淲e really worked with an ongoing collaboration with that site,糖心vlog短视频 Gollub says. 糖心vlog短视频淲e all put in different skills, and we  made this wonderful mosaic.糖心vlog短视频

Charles describes the experience as a learning opportunity on both sides.

糖心vlog短视频淚n the process, we learn what it takes to do global study,糖心vlog短视频 she says. 糖心vlog短视频淓ach side learned something.糖心vlog短视频

That collaborative approach is central to the impact of the work. By listening to providers already embedded in local health systems, the research identifies practical steps that could improve training, counseling, outreach, and policy as the PrEP ring becomes more widely available. 

The implications extend beyond Uganda. As Gollub notes, research in one setting can inform HIV prevention for women globally, including in the United States.

糖心vlog短视频淭he research that we do anywhere is going to support women getting access to HIV tools everywhere,糖心vlog短视频 she says.

For Pace, the study is a powerful example of faculty research that connects public health innovation with real human need. It reflects CHP糖心vlog短视频檚 commitment to socially responsive, globally minded health education and to preparing health professionals who understand that improving care means understanding people, communities, and systems.

Charles puts the global stakes simply: 糖心vlog短视频淲hat happens to your neighbor eventually happens to you.糖心vlog短视频

Through their work, Charles and Gollub are helping ensure that more women have access not only to HIV prevention tools, but also to choices, information, and support. In global health, that is a major win.

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