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Community-Based Interventions to Reduce Low Income, African American Women's Risk of Sexually Transmitted Diseases: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Three Theoretical Models
Authors:Janet S. St. Lawrence  Tracey E. Wilson  Gloria D. Eldridge  Ted L. Brasfield  Robert E. O'Bannon III
Affiliation:(1) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Jackson State University, USA;(2) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, State University of New York Health Science Center at Brooklyn, USA;(3) Jackson State University, USA
Abstract:A community-based sample of disadvantaged African American women (n = 445) was recruited to participate in 1 of 3 theoretically driven experimental interventions based on either the theory of gender and power, social learning theory, or cognitive behavioral theory. Intervention outcomes were compared with a waiting list control condition. From baseline to postintervention, women in the experimental interventions showed differential change on cognitive indices (knowledge and attitudes) and skill acquisition (partner negotiation skills, correct condom application, lubricant selection, and information-provision to social networks) whereas control participants were unchanged. Women in the 3 experimental interventions also completed follow-up assessments for 1 year following the interventions. In all 3 experimental conditions, condom use increased relative to the control group and there were no differences between the experimental interventions. Women who participated in one of the theoretically grounded interventions continued to increase condom use over the following year. Women entering new relationships reported significantly more condom use than did women who remained in ongoing relationships. The findings suggest that intervention models that have proven effective for women who engage in high-risk behavior may be less effective for women in established relationships for whom risk is primarily derived from the extrarelationship behavior of their partners.
Keywords:African American women  HIV  sexual risk behavior  interventions to reduce risk behavior  theory-driven interventions
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