Objective: To examine adherence to a 23-session intervention for young people living with HIV.
Methods: Two hundred eight HIV-positive youth were assigned by small cohort to a behavioral intervention.
Results: Youth with more personal strengths were more likely to attend the intervention; those with more competing environmental demands (eg, employment, school) were less likely to attend the intervention.
HIV-related stigma was examined among 209 employees and owners of stalls in 5 markets in an eastern coastal city in China. Of the participants 53% were women and 47% were men; 100% were Han. Ages ranged from 18 to 49 years (M=35, SD=8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn intervention for young people living with HIV (YPLH) was effective in reducing the number of partners of unknown serostatus and the number of unprotected sexual risk acts. In this article, we outline new methods to assess the cost-effectiveness of this intervention. Over a period of 3 months, the intervention would avert an estimated 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Parents' disclosure of their HIV serostatus to all of their children is described over time and the impact of disclosure is examined for their adolescent children. DESIGN A representative cohort of parents living with HIV (n = 301) and their adolescent children (n = 395) was recruited and assessed repeatedly over 5 years.
Methods: Disclosures by parents living with HIV of their HIV status to their children were examined in three ways: (i) trends in disclosure over 5 years to all children; (ii) factors associated with parental disclosure; and (iii) the impact of disclosure on adolescent children (not younger children).