Literature DB >> 21042051

Behavioural interventions to reduce HIV risk: what works?

David A Ross1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This paper reviews the potential intervention approaches that have been used to prevent HIV through reducing risky sexual behaviours, summarizes the evidence on their effectiveness, primarily from trials, and discusses the way forward both in terms of research and programmes.
METHODS: An update of a recent systematic review of HIV prevention interventions, focusing on trials that have included HIV as an outcome.
RESULTS: Five major intervention approaches have been used: community-wide sexual health education, adolescent sexual health interventions, interventions among groups most at risk, promotion of HIV testing and counseling, and interventions among HIV-positive individuals. The latter have often been underemphasized in programmes and research. Effective targeting of interventions to prevent HIV acquisition requires an understanding of HIV incidence by age and sex, whereas HIV prevalence patterns are critical for targeting interventions to reduce HIV transmission (positive prevention). Unfortunately, none of the nine behavioural randomized trials with HIV outcomes have shown a significant impact on HIV. Sometimes this has clearly been due to issues in trial design such as inadequate sample size or low coverage, but not always. Although more encouraging, trials with behavioural outcomes only cannot be used to assume an impact on HIV due to the potential for misreporting and biases in reported sexual behaviour.
CONCLUSION: Future research and programmes should place greater emphasis on interventions to reduce HIV transmission as well as acquisition, the sexual norms of the wider population, include a focus on concurrency, and on greatly increasing community acceptance and use of condoms.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 21042051     DOI: 10.1097/01.aids.0000390703.35642.89

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS        ISSN: 0269-9370            Impact factor:   4.177


  28 in total

1.  Strategies Chosen by YMSM During Goal Setting to Reduce Risk for HIV and Other Sexually Transmitted Infections: Results From the Keep It Up! 2.0 Prevention Trial.

Authors:  Darnell N Motley; Sydney Hammond; Brian Mustanski
Journal:  AIDS Educ Prev       Date:  2017-02

Review 2.  Innovative Strategies for Scale up of Effective Combination HIV Prevention Interventions in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Authors:  Kwame Shanaube; Peter Bock
Journal:  Curr HIV/AIDS Rep       Date:  2015-06       Impact factor: 5.071

Review 3.  School-based interventions for preventing HIV, sexually transmitted infections, and pregnancy in adolescents.

Authors:  Amanda J Mason-Jones; David Sinclair; Catherine Mathews; Ashraf Kagee; Alex Hillman; Carl Lombard
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2016-11-08

4.  Conceptual framework for behavioral and social science in HIV vaccine clinical research.

Authors:  Chuen-Yen Lau; Edith M Swann; Sagri Singh; Zuhayr Kafaar; Helen I Meissner; James P Stansbury
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2011-08-05       Impact factor: 3.641

5.  A "Common Factors" Approach to Developing Culturally Tailored HIV Prevention Interventions.

Authors:  Jill Owczarzak; Sarah D Phillips; Olga Filippova; Polina Alpatova; Alyona Mazhnaya; Tatyana Zub; Ruzanna Aleksanyan
Journal:  Health Educ Behav       Date:  2015-08-26

Review 6.  Reporting quality of search methods in systematic reviews of HIV behavioral interventions (2000-2010): are the searches clearly explained, systematic and reproducible?

Authors:  Mary M Mullins; Julia B DeLuca; Nicole Crepaz; Cynthia M Lyles
Journal:  Res Synth Methods       Date:  2013-10-08       Impact factor: 5.273

7.  Violence Against Women in Selected Areas of the United States.

Authors:  Brooke E E Montgomery; Anne Rompalo; James Hughes; Jing Wang; Danielle Haley; Lydia Soto-Torres; Wairimu Chege; Jessica Justman; Irene Kuo; Carol Golin; Paula Frew; Sharon Mannheimer; Sally Hodder
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2015-03-19       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 8.  Setting the bar high or setting up to fail? Interpretations and implications of the EXPLORE Study (HPTN 015).

Authors:  Seth C Kalichman; Larissa Zohren; Lisa A Eaton
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2014-04

9.  Towards an integrated framework for accelerating the end for the global HIV epidemic among young people.

Authors:  Ralph J DiClemente; Jerrold M Jackson
Journal:  Sex Educ       Date:  2014

10.  HIV prevention research: taking stock and the way forward.

Authors:  Richard Hayes; Saidi Kapiga; Nancy Padian; Sheena McCormack; Judith Wasserheit
Journal:  AIDS       Date:  2010-10       Impact factor: 4.177

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