Resum
Food insecurity negatively affects HIV prevention and care, and sustainable
interventions are needed. Here we describe the development of an
integrated urban gardens and peer nutritional counseling intervention
to address food insecurity and nutrition among people with HIV, which
included: (1) peer nutritional counseling, (2) gardening training, and (3)
garden-based nutrition and cooking workshops. The intervention was
developed using community-based participatory research over multiple
years and stages of data gathering and implementation and evaluation.
Lessons learned include the importance of cross-sectoral partnerships
to achieve multifaceted, integrated, and sustainable interventions and a
shared commitment among partners to an ongoing cycle of action-oriented research, and the need for home-based and community-based gardens to
enhance food security and social support. The development process successfully
combined an evidence-based framework and community engagement
to yield a multicomponent yet integrated food security and nutrition
intervention appropriate for people with HIV and potentially adaptable for
other chronic conditions.