Examining the efficacy of a computer facilitated HIV prevention tool in drug court
Keywords
adultarticle
clinical effectiveness
computer program
condom
controlled study
female
high risk behavior
HIV test
human
Human immunodeficiency virus infection
infection prevention
infection risk
intervention study
male
priority journal
randomized controlled trial
risk reduction
scoring system
sexual behavior
young adult
Computer Assessment and Risk Reduction Education
Substance Abuse and Addiction
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https://digitalcommons.pcom.edu/scholarly_papers/1719Abstract
Background: Although they have demonstrated efficacy in reducing substance use and criminal recidivism, competing priorities and limited resources may preclude drug court programs from formally addressing HIV risk. This study examined the efficacy of a brief, three-session, computer-facilitated HIV prevention intervention in reducing HIV risk among adult felony drug court participants. Methods: Two hundred participants were randomly assigned to an HIV intervention (n = 101) or attention control (n = 99) group. All clients attended judicial status hearings approximately every six weeks. At the first three status hearings following study entry, clients in the intervention group completed the computerized, interactive HIV risk reduction sessions while those in the control group viewed a series of educational life-skill videos of matched length. Outcomes included the rate of independently obtained HIV testing, engagement in high risk HIV-related behaviors, and rate of condom procurement from the research site at each session. Results: Results indicated that participants who received the HIV intervention were significantly more likely to report having obtained HIV testing at some point during the study period than those in the control condition, although the effect was marginally significant when examined in a longitudinal model. In addition, they had higher rates of condom procurement. No group differences were found on rates of high-risk sexual behavior, and the low rate of injection drug reported precluded examination of high-risk drug-related behavior. Conclusions: The study provides support for the feasibility and utility of delivering HIV prevention services to drug court clients using an efficient computer-facilitated program.Date
2016-01-01Type
textIdentifier
oai:digitalcommons.pcom.edu:scholarly_papers-2843https://digitalcommons.pcom.edu/scholarly_papers/1719