Abstract

BackgroundAn estimated 2·3 Million individuals are newly infected with HIV each year. Existing cross-sectional and longitudinal studies have found conflicting evidence on the association between education and HIV risk, and no randomized experiment to date has identified a causal effect of education on HIV incidence.MethodsA 1996 policy reform changed the grade structure of secondary school in Botswana and increased educational attainment. We use this reform as a ‘natural experiment’ to identify the causal effect of schooling on HIV infection. Data on HIV biomarkers and demographics were obtained from the 2004 and 2008 Botswana AIDS Impact Surveys, nationally-representative household surveys (N = 7018). The association between years of schooling and HIV status was described using multivariate OLS regression models. Using exposure to the policy reform as an instrumental variable, we estimated the causal effect of years of schooling on the cumulative probability that an individual contracted HIV up to his or her age at the time of the survey. The cost-effectiveness of secondary schooling as an HIV prevention intervention was assessed in comparison to other established interventions.FindingsEach additional year of secondary schooling induced by the policy change led to an absolute reduction in the cumulative risk of HIV infection of 8·1% points (p = 0·008), relative to a baseline prevalence of 25·6%. Effects were particularly large among women (11·6% points, p = 0·046). Results were robust to a wide array of sensitivity analyses. Secondary school was cost-effective as an HIV prevention intervention by standard metrics.InterpretationAdditional years of secondary schooling had a large protective effect against HIV risk, particularly for women, in Botswana. Increasing progression through secondary school may be a cost-effective HIV prevention measure in HIV-endemic settings, in addition to yielding other societal benefits.FundingTakemi Program in International Health at the Harvard School of Public Health, Belgian American Educational Foundation, and Fernand Lazard Foundation.

Highlights

  • HIV continues to be a major global health challenge with an estimated 2·1 million new infections each year.[1]

  • The strong association between schooling and HIV risk at higher school grades persisted in multivariate regression

  • Each additional year of schooling after 9 years was associated with a 3·6 percentage point (SE 0·4) lower risk of HIV infection

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Summary

Introduction

HIV continues to be a major global health challenge with an estimated 2·1 million new infections each year.[1] Formal education, of girls, has been hailed as a social vaccine to reduce the spread of HIV.[2] little causal evidence exists for this claim.[3] Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies have reported conflicting evidence for the association between education and HIV risk. Education might increase the size of an individual’s sexual network, prolong the period of premarital sex,[22] and increase transactional sex among men.[23] In addition to the implication of this study for HIV prevention, we aimed to contribute to the debate about whether the relationship between education and health more broadly is causal.[24,25,26,27]

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