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Information-motivation-behavioral skills model-based HIV risk behavior change intervention for inner-city high school youth.
470
Citations
50
References
2002
Year
Adolescent Behavioral HealthEducationSchool HealthPsychologyHealth CommunicationPublic HealthHiv Prevention BehaviorHealth EducationPublic Health InterventionBehavioral SciencesSchool PsychologyBehavioral SkillsHealth PromotionMotivationHiv Prevention InformationAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentSexual HealthBehavioral SupportTreatment And PreventionHealth BehaviorPrevention ScienceYouth Behavioral Health
This study assessed the effects of 3 theoretically grounded, school-based HIV prevention interventions on inner-city minority high school students' levels of HIV prevention information, motivation, behavioral skills, and behavior. It involved a quasi-experimental controlled trial comparing classroom-based, peer-based, and combined classroom- and peer-based HIV prevention interventions with a standard-of-care control condition in 4 urban high schools (N = 1,532, primarily 9th-grade students). At 12 months postintervention, the classroom-based intervention resulted in sustained changes in HIV prevention behavior. This article discusses why both of the interventions involving peers were less effective than the classroom-based intervention at the 12-month follow-up and, more generally, suggests a set of possible limiting conditions for the efficacy of peer-based interventions.
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