Assessing the effects of a complementary parent intervention and prior exposure to a preadolescent program of HIV risk reduction for mid-adolescents.

Journal: American Journal Of Public Health
Published:
Abstract

Objective: We (1) evaluated the impact of an evidence-based HIV prevention program with and without a parent component among mid-adolescents living in the Caribbean and (2) determined the effect of prior receipt of a related intervention during preadolescence on intervention response.

Methods: A randomized, controlled 4-cell trial of a 10-session, theory-based HIV prevention intervention involving 2564 Bahamian grade-10 youths (some of whom had received a comparable intervention in grade 6) was conducted (2008-2011). Randomization occurred at the level of the classroom with follow-up at 6, 12, and 18 months after intervention. The 3 experimental conditions all included the youths' curriculum and either a youth-parent intervention emphasizing adolescent-parent communication, a parent-only goal-setting intervention, or no parent intervention.

Results: An intervention delivered to mid-adolescents in combination with a parent-adolescent sexual-risk communication intervention increased HIV/AIDS knowledge, condom-use skills, and self-efficacy and had a marginal effect on consistent condom use. Regardless of prior exposure to a similar intervention as preadolescents, youths benefited from receipt of the intervention.

Conclusions: Preadolescents and mid-adolescents in HIV-affected countries should receive HIV prevention interventions that include parental participation.

Authors
Bonita Stanton, Bo Wang, Lynette Deveaux, Sonja Lunn, Glenda Rolle, Xiaoming Li, Nanika Braithwaite, Veronica Dinaj Koci, Sharon Marshall, Perry Gomez
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS