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Authors: Malotte, CK1;
Dillon, B2; Iatesta, M2;
Douglas, JM, Jr3; Cross, H4;
Metcalf CA2; Padilla, SM1;
and the RESPECT-2 Study Group
1California
State University Long Beach, Long Beach, CA;
2Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Atlanta, GA; 3Denver
Public Health, Denver, CO; 4New Jersey
Department of Health and Senior Services,
Trenton, NJ
Issue: HIV Prevention counseling seeks to
reduce HIV/STD risk by means of a realistic personalized
risk-reduction plan.
Setting: Public STD clinics in Long Beach,
Denver, and Newark.
Project: RESPECT-2 is an ongoing multi-site
randomized trial comparing the efficacy of 2 types of
HIV prevention counseling. Both types of counseling
focus on the participant’s risk behaviors, and assist
the participant in developing a realistic risk-reduction
plan. A computer-assisted self-interview on recent risk
behavior is completed at 4 quarterly follow-up visits.
The 3-month interview includes questions customized for
each participant, assessing recall of the risk-reduction
plan, success at achieving it, and barriers making it
difficult to achieve. Those who do not correctly
identify their plan are reminded what it was. Results:
Of the 2,366 participants who completed the interview,
66% correctly identified their plan. Most (92%) reported
having tried their plan. Of those who tried, 69%
reported being very (37%) or somewhat (32%) successful.
Of those who reported success, most felt that their
actions were very likely (60%) or likely (25%) to have
reduced their risk. The most common barriers to
achieving the plan were concern about partner’s reaction
(12%), partner unsupportive (9%), participant discomfort
(7%), and difficulty remembering the plan (6%). Compared
to those who did not identify their plan correctly, a
larger percentage of those who identified their plan
reported trying to do the plan (95% vs. 88%, p<.001) and
being successful (71% vs. 64%, p<.001). There were no
differences by age group or gender in correctly
identifying the plan, trying to do the plan, or success
in doing the plan. However, females were more likely
than males to report concern about partner reaction (15%
vs. 10%, p<.001), and unsupportive partners (12% vs. 7%,
p<.001) as barriers to completing the plan.
African-Americans (63%) were less likely to correctly
identify their plan than Latino (67%) or white (72%)
participants (p<.001), and were somewhat less likely to
think that the plan reduced their risk, but were similar
on other measures. Lessons learned:
A majority of participants correctly identified their
risk-reduction plan, had tried to achieve it, reported
success, and felt this had reduced their risk. One-third
of the participants did not identify their plan,
however. Additional efforts should be focused on dealing
with real or imagined partner resistance, and helping
clients to remember their plans.
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