Sustained Institutional Effects of an Evidence-based HIV Prevention Intervention

被引:0
|
作者
Bo Wang
Bonita Stanton
Valerie Knowles
Glenda Russell-Rolle
Lynette Deveaux
Veronica Dinaj-Koci
Xiaoming Li
Nanika Brathwaite
Sonja Lunn
机构
[1] Wayne State University School of Medicine,Pediatric Prevention Research Center, Department of Pediatrics
[2] Ministry of Health,Office of HIV/AIDS
[3] Ministry of Education,undefined
来源
Prevention Science | 2014年 / 15卷
关键词
FOYC intervention; AIDS knowledge; Self-efficacy; Intention to use protection; Enduring effect;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Limited data are available as to what happens in institutions involved in behavioral intervention trials after the trial has ended. Specifically, do the trainers continue to administer the behavioral intervention that had been the focus of the trial? To address this question, we examined data in grade six schools before a year-long behavioral intervention had been delivered in some schools (and a year-long control condition in others) and data obtained again 6 and 7 years later in the same two sets of schools. Data were derived from the baseline surveys of two interventions: (1) national implementation of the evidence-based Focus on Youth in the Caribbean (FOYC) intervention in 2011; and (2) the randomized, controlled trial of the FOYC intervention in 2004/2005. Cross-sectional, longitudinal comparisons and random coefficient regression analysis were conducted to evaluate long-term intervention effects. Results indicate that grade six students in 2011 from schools in which the FOYC intervention had been implemented in 2004/2005 had a higher level of HIV/AIDS knowledge, increased reproductive health skills, increased self-efficacy regarding their ability to prevent HIV infection, and greater intention to use protection if they were to have sex compared to their counterparts from schools where no such training took place. We concluded that new cohorts of students benefited from the extensive training and/or experience in teaching the FOYC curriculum received by teachers, guidance counselors and administrators in schools which had delivered the FOYC intervention as part of a randomized trial several years earlier. The findings suggest that teachers who previously were trained to deliver the FOYC intervention may continue to teach at least some portions of the curriculum to subsequent classes of students attending these schools.
引用
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页码:340 / 349
页数:9
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