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A randomized clinical trial of a manual-guided risk reduction intervention for HIV-positive injection drug users.
171
Citations
24
References
2003
Year
Randomized Clinical TrialSubstance UsePharmacotherapyDrug TreatmentHarm ReductionPreventive MedicineClinical TrialsRandomized Controlled TrialAddiction MedicinePharmacologic InterventionPublic HealthHealth SciencesPsychiatryAddiction TreatmentHigh Risk BehaviorHivSexual HealthSubstance AbuseTreatment And PreventionAddictionDrug TrialSubstance AddictionMedicine
This study randomized 90 HIV-seropositive, methadone-maintained injection drug users (IDUs) to an HIV Harm Reduction Program (HHRP+) or to an active control that included harm reduction components recommended by the National AIDS Demonstration Research Project. The treatment phase lasted 6 months, with follow-ups at 6 and 9 months after treatment entry. Patients in both treatments showed reductions in risk behaviors. However, patients assigned to HHRP+ were less likely to use illicit opiates and were more likely to adhere to antiretroviral medications during treatment; at follow-up, they had lower addiction severity scores and were less likely to have engaged in high risk behavior. Findings suggest that enhancing methadone maintenance with an intervention targeting HIV-seropositive IDUs increases both harm reduction and health promotion behaviors.
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