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Reducing inner-city women's AIDS risk activities: A study of single, pregnant women.
147
Citations
17
References
1994
Year
Urban HealthHealth PreventionSocial Determinants Of HealthSocial SupportHigh-risk PregnancyContraceptionPreventive MedicineHealth CommunicationPublic Health PracticeInner-city WomenPublic HealthSexual And Reproductive HealthBehavioral Competency TrainingPublic Health InterventionPregnancy PreventionHealth PolicyDisease PreventionHealth PromotionAids Risk ActivitiesMaternal HealthHivCommunity HealthEpidemiologySexual HealthTreatment And PreventionHiv InfectionHealth BehaviorPregnancyPregnant WomenPrevention ScienceMedicineWomen's Health
Behavioral change reduces risk of HIV infection and development of AIDS. We compared 206 inner-city women who were randomly assigned to a 4-session AIDS-prevention group or to one of two controls, a health-promotion group or a no-intervention group. AIDS-prevention and health-promotion groups provided information, behavioral competency training, and social support. Only the AIDS-prevention group focused on AIDS-specific knowledge and skills. The AIDS-prevention group produced moderate, consistent increases in knowledge and safer sex behaviors in comparison with either the health-promotion or no-intervention group. Self-report and objective changes were sustained 6 months after intervention for both African-American and European-American women.
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