Nicole Chetty

Nicole Chetty
Nicole is a Research Assistant for the Accelerate Hub since February 2020 and has been supporting with monitoring and evaluation in the COVID-19 parenting work, but also extending this to support the M&E work associated with the LEGO grant in South Africa, evaluating ParentText, ParentChat and ParentApp as they are piloted.

 

 

 

 

Contact details:

Email: anicolechetty@gmail.com / nicole.chetty@uct.ac.za

Nicole's CV available here

Latest publications:

Cluver, L., Doubt, J., the Teen Advisory Groups South Africa, Wessels, I., Asnong, C., Malunga, S., Mauchline, K., Vale, B., Medley, S., Toska, E., Orkin, K., Dunkley, Y., Meinck, F., Myeketsi, N., Lasa, S., Rupert, C., Boyes, M., Pantelic, M., Sherr, L., Gittings, L., Hodes, R., Kuo, C., Chetty, A., Thabeng, M. (2020) Power to participants: methodological and ethical reflections from a decade of adolescent advisory groups in South Africa, AIDS Care, DOI: 10.1080/09540121.2020.1845289

 


Angelique Thomas

Senior Research Assistant : HEY BABY UKRI GCRF Accelerating Achievement for Africa’s Adolescents (Adolescent Accelerators Research Hub) 

Angelique Thomas
Angelique is a social science researcher with a particular interest in stigma and intersectionality, marginalised groups, mental health, and sexual and reproductive health. She is currently a Senior Research Assistant working on the HEY BABY study where she is involved in longitudinal qualitative research in South Africa with adolescent girls and young women living with HIV, their primary caregivers, and their sexual partners to explore the complex pathways leading to unintended pregnancy and viral failure. Additionally, she works with the Adolescent Engagement and Participation Group where she supports the development of participatory research methodologies to understand how young people want to participate in research and understand COVID-19 related challenges they are currently facing. Angelique is currently pursuing her PhD in the Dept of Anthropology, UCT, under the supervision of Prof Susan Levine & Dr Elona Toska on the sexual and reproductive health resilience of young women living with HIV in South Africa.

 

 

Contact details:

Email:angelique.thomas@uct.ac.za

Anqeligue's CV is available here

Latest publications:

de Villiers, L., Thomas, A., Jivan, D., Hoddinott, G., Hargreaves, J. R., Bond, V., Stangl, A., Bock, P., Reynolds, L., & HPTN 071 (PopART) study team (2020). Stigma and HIV service access among transfeminine and gender diverse women in South Africa - a narrative analysis of longitudinal qualitative data from the HPTN 071 (PopART) trial. BMC public health, 20(1), 1898. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-09942-5

Hoddinott, G., Myburgh, H., de Villiers, L., Ndubani, R., Mantantana. J., Thomas, A., Ayles, H., Bock, P., Fidler, S., Hayes, R., Seeley, J., Shanaube, K., Hargreaves, J., Bond, V., and Reynolds, L on behalf of the HPTN 071 (PopART) study team. (2018). Households, fluidity, and HIV service delivery in Zambia and South Africa – an exploratory analysis of longitudinal qualitative data from the HPTN 071 (PopART) trial. Journal of the International AIDS Society.

Bond, V; Ngwenya, F; Thomas, A; Simuyaba, M; Hoddinott, G; Fidler,S;  Hayes, R; Ayles, H; Seeley, J and on behalf of the HPTN 071 (PopART) study team. (2018). Spinning Plates: Livelihood mobility, household responsibility and anti-retroviral treatment in an urban Zambian community during the HPTN 071 (PopART) study. Journal of the International AIDS Society.

Viljoen, L; Thorne, M; Thomas, A; Bond, V and Hoddinott, G on behalf of the HPTN 071 (PopART) Study Team. (2016). A narrative analysis positioning HIV relative to personal (sexual) relationship challenges in an agony aunt column in the Western Cape, South Africa – Antie Mona’s ‘love advice’. AIDS CARE Vol 28, Issue sup3.