By Teko Kerata | Assistant Programs Manager
Every adolescent girl deserves the chance to make informed choices about her health, her body, and her future. Stepping Stones International (SSI) brought HIV prevention and sexual and reproductive health services closer to adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in Kgatleng (Botswana) through integrated, youth-friendly outreach activities.
With your support, SSI worked alongside Motswedi Rehabilitation Center, community leaders, Primary Health Care teams, the District AIDS Coordinator’s office, Tebelopele, BOFWA, AO Clinic, and other service partners to reduce barriers that often prevent young people from accessing care. Instead of asking girls to navigate many offices alone, SSI used One Stop Shop activities and health expos to bring trusted providers into one supportive space.
These activities created safe, practical entry points for girls and young women to ask questions, receive prevention messages, access referrals, and complete services. The approach was especially important for young women who may face stigma, transport challenges, fear, disability-related barriers, or uncertainty about where to go for confidential support.
What your support made possible
The prevention and stigma reduction sessions addressed common myths and facts about HIV, helping participants strengthen their understanding of HIV, reduce fear, and challenge stereotypes that fuel discrimination. Girls and young women were encouraged to see HIV services not as a place of shame, but as a pathway to protection, confidence, and hope. Furthermore, Peer Approach to Counseling for Teens (PACT) members were also empowered so that they continue to have conversations with their peers.
A key highlight was SSI’s engagement with AGYW and the Phantsha Foo radio show team. The panel discussion gave young people a platform to speak openly about HIV-related issues, access to youth-friendly health services, and how peers can support one another positively. By taking the conversation beyond the activity venue and onto radio, the voices of young people reached a wider audience and helped normalize dialogue around HIV prevention. Phantsha Hoo, which means "Speak Out" is a dynamic, non-judgmental, youth-led radio programme airing every Saturday from 1000 AM to 1100 A.M (GMT) on Yarona FM, a leading youth radio station. (https://steppingstonesintl.org/phantsa-hoo/)
This shows that when services are brought closer to girls (and delivered with dignity, privacy, and partnership), young people respond. The completed referrals and uptake of HIV testing, PrEP, PEP, contraceptive implants, condoms, lubricants, and prevention education demonstrate that integrated community outreach can help girls move from information to action.
Challenges we are addressing
What comes next
Because of GlobalGiving donors, more girls and young women in Botswana are not only hearing about HIV prevention. They are accessing lifesaving services, completing referrals, and finding the confidence to protect their health. Thank you for helping SSI keep these doors open.
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