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Journal Article

Citation

Smith MU, Dane FC, Archer ME, Devereaux RS, Katner HP. AIDS Educ. Prev. 2000; 12(1): 49-70.

Affiliation

Department of Internal Medicine, Mercer University School of Medicine, Macon, GA 31201, USA. smith_mu@mercer.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Guilford Publications)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10749386

Abstract

Twenty-one 10th graders selected as opinion leaders by their peers in a rural county in a southern state participated in a 36-hour peer-educator training program Students Together Against Negative Decisions (STAND) based on diffusion of innovations theory and the transtheoretical model. Comparison subjects received either a 22-hour leadership training course (n = 20) or no intervention (n = 45). STAND and comparison subjects completed a 154-item written knowledge, attitude, and behavior survey at the beginning of the training (Time 1), at the end of the training (Time 2), and again 8 months later (Time 3). One hundred and sixty-seven other 9th and 10th graders in the intervention county and 74 in the comparison county completed an abbreviated telephone interview at Time 1 and Time 3. At Time 3 STAND-trained peer educators reported significantly greater increases in AIDS Risk Behavior Knowledge (more than 4 times comparison groups), frequency of conversations with peers about birth control/condoms (+180% vs. +12%) and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs; +282% vs. -33%), condom use self efficacy (+16% vs. -1%), and consistent condom use (+28% vs. +15%). STAND teens also reported substantial favorable trends at Time 3, including increased condom use (+213% vs. +31%) and decreased unprotected intercourse (-30% vs. +29%). At Time 3 teens in the intervention county reported significantly greater increases in the number of people who talked with friends in the preceding 3 months about STDs (+39% vs. -19%) or with a parent/adult about sex (+6% vs. -37%). Intervention county teens also reported a substantial but nonsignificant 2.6-fold greater increase in condom use at last intercourse (+64% vs. +25%) but unfavorable changes in other risk behaviors. The STAND peer-educator training program appears to be an effective method for improving selected sexual knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors among participant teenagers in the rural South.


Language: en

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