Volume 20, Issue 2 , Pages 110-121, March 2009
Effects of a Culturally Adapted HIV Prevention Intervention in Haitian Youth
This study assessed the impact of an 8-week community-based translation of Becoming a Responsible Teen (BART), an HIV intervention that has been shown to be effective in other at-risk adolescent populations. A sample of Haitian adolescents living in the Miami area was randomized to a general health education control group (n = 101) or the BART intervention (n = 145), which was based on the information-motivation-behavior (IMB) model. Improvement in various IMB components (i.e., attitudinal, knowledge, and behavioral skills variables) related to condom use was assessed 1 month after the intervention. Longitudinal structural equation models using a mixture of latent and measured multi-item variables indicated that the intervention significantly and positively impacted all IMB variables tested in the model. These BART intervention-linked changes reflected greater knowledge, greater intentions to use condoms in the future, higher safer sex self-efficacy, an improved attitude about condom use, and an enhanced ability to use condoms after the 8-week intervention.
Key words: adolescence, haitian, HIV prevention, sexual risk
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PII: S1055-3290(08)00272-0
doi:10.1016/j.jana.2008.12.003
© 2009 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 20, Issue 2 , Pages 110-121, March 2009
