Background: Contextually tailored, arts-based HIV prevention strategies hold potential to advance adolescent sexual health and wellbeing. We examined HIV prevention outcomes associated with arts-based sexual health workshop participation with Northern and Indigenous adolescents in the Northwest Territories (NWT), Canada.
Methods: An Indigenous community-based youth agency delivered arts-based workshops in school settings to adolescents aged 13-18 in 24 NWT communities. Pre and post-test surveys included socio-demographic characteristics, sexually infections (STI) knowledge, HIV/STI risk perception, sexual relationship equity, condom use self-efficacy, and safer sex efficacy (SSE). Latent change score models were conducted to assess pre-post differences and factors associated with these differences.
Results: Among participants ( = 344; mean age 14.3 years, SD: 1.3; Indigenous: 79%) most (66%) had previously attended this workshop. Latent change score models revealed a significant and large effect size for increased STI knowledge (β = 2.10, SE = 0.48, < .001) and significant and small effect sizes for increased HIV/STI risk perception (β = 0.24, SE = 0.06, < .001) and SSE (β = 0.16, SE = 0.07, = .02). The largest increases across several outcomes occurred with first time workshop participants; yet previous workshop participants continued to report increases in HIV/STI risk perception and SSE.
Conclusion: Arts-based HIV prevention approaches show promise in advancing STI knowledge, risk perception, and SSE with Northern and Indigenous youth.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09564624241226995 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Form Res
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Pharmacy Department, Gold Coast Hospital and Health Service, Southport, Australia.
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Objective: This study aimed to explore AHP perceptions of AI and the opportunities and challenges for its use in health care delivery.
Math Biosci
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Biocomplexity Institute, University of Virginia, VA, USA; Department of Computer Science, University of Virginia, VA, USA.
Public health interventions reduce infection risk, while imposing significant costs on both individuals and the society. Interventions can also lead to behavioral changes, as individuals weigh the cost and benefits of avoiding infection. Aggregate epidemiological models typically focus on the population-level consequences of interventions, often not incorporating the mechanisms driving behavioral adaptations associated with interventions compliance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2025
School of Economics & Management, Beijing Information Science & Technology University, Beijing, China.
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