Publication | Closed Access
Reducing Postrelease HIV Risk among Male Prison Inmates
94
Citations
15
References
1999
Year
Criminal LawHarm ReductionAddiction MedicinePublic HealthPrison ViolenceSexual And Reproductive HealthHealth PolicyMale Prison InmatesPrerelease InterventionHivEpidemiologyCriminal JusticeSubstance AbuseSexual HealthTreatment And PreventionAddictionPreincarceration At-risk BehaviorCarceral SettingMedicine
Male prison inmates within 2 weeks of release were recruited to evaluate a prerelease HIV prevention intervention. A total of 414 inmates were randomly assigned to receive the intervention or to a comparison group. All participants completed a face-to-face survey at baseline; high rates of preincarceration at-risk behavior were reported. Follow-up telephone surveys were completed with 43% of participants; results support the effectiveness of the prerelease intervention. Men who received the intervention were significantly more likely to use a condom the first time they had sex after release from prison and also were less likely to have used drugs, injected drugs, or shared needles in the first 2 weeks after release from prison. Implications for the development, implementation, and evaluation of prison-based HIV prevention programs are discussed.
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