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Structural Ecosystems Therapy for HIV+ African‐American Women and Drug Abuse Relapse
Authors:DANIEL J. FEASTER PH.D.  MYRON J. BURNS PH.D.  AHNALEE M. BRINCKS M.A.  GUILLERMO PRADO PH.D.  VICTORIA B. MITRANI PH.D.  MEGALY H. MAUER PH.D.  JOSE SZAPOCZNIK PH.D.
Affiliation:1. Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Miami.;2. Department of Psychology, Nevada State College.;3. School of Nursing and Health Studies, University of Miami.;4. Private practice.
Abstract:To read this article's abstract in both Spanish and Mandarin Chinese, please visit the article's full‐text page on Wiley InterScience ( http://interscience.wiley.com/journal/famp ). This report examines the effect of Structural Ecosystems Therapy (SET) for (n=143) HIV+ African‐American women on rate of relapse to substance use relative to both a person‐centered approach (PCA) to therapy and a community control (CC) group. A prior report has shown SET to decrease psychological distress and family hassles relative to these 2 comparison groups. In new analyses, SET and CC had a significant protective effect against relapse as compared with PCA. There is evidence that SET's protective effect on relapse was related to reductions in family hassles, whereas there was not a direct impact of change in psychological distress on rates of relapse. Lower retention in PCA, perhaps caused by the lack of a directive component to PCA, may have put these women at greater risk for relapse. Whereas SET did not specifically address substance abuse, SET indirectly protected at‐risk women from relapse through reductions in family hassles.
Keywords:Ecosystems  Family  Drug Abuse  Relapse  HIV/AIDS
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