An HIV Prevention Intervention for Ethnically Diverse Men in Substance Abuse Treatment: Pilot Study Findings.

American Journal of Public Health 2013;103(5):896-902

Calsyn, Donald A. | Burlew, Ann Kathleen | Hatch-Maillette, Mary A. | Beadnell, Blair | Wright, Lynette | Wilson, Jerika

The National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN) recently completed a randomized clinical trial evaluating the utility of Real Men Are Safe (REMAS), an HIV prevention intervention for men in substance abuse treatment (protocol CTN-0018). Analysis of the data with a focus on racial/ethnicity-related differences found a differential effect for white versus minority men. This study aimed to determine the acceptability, participants' receptivity, and effectiveness of a culturally adapted version of Real Men Are Safe (REMAS-CA). In 2010 and 2011, the authors compared participants who attended at least 1 (of 5) REMAS-CA session (n=66) with participants in the original REMAS study (n=136). Participants completed an assessment battery at baseline and at 3-month follow-up with measures of substance abuse, HIV risk behaviors, perceived condom barriers, and demographics. Post-intervention focus groups were conducted at each clinic. Results found that minority REMAS-CA participants were more likely to have attended 3 or more sessions (87%), meeting the study definition of "intervention completion," than were minority participants in the REMAS study (75.1%; odds ratio: 2.1). For REMAS-CA participants with casual partners (n=25), the number of unprotected sexual occasions in the past 90 days declined (6.2 vs. 1.6). Among minority men in the REMAS study (n=36), the number of unprotected sexual occasions with casual partners changed little (9.4 vs. 8.4).

Conclusions: REMAS-CA was effective across ethnic groups and appears to be more appealing to minorities than the original REMAS intervention. The finding that REMAS-CA was appealing across ethnic groups is especially important because many HIV risk reduction programs serve a diverse clientele and lack the resources to target an intervention solely to one ethnic group.

Keywords: African Americans | Community health services | Condom use | CTN platform/ancillary study | Gender-specific interventions | Hispanics and Latinos | HIV/AIDS | Minority groups | Real Men Are Safe (REMAS) | Real Men Are Safe - Culturally Adapted (REMAS-CA) | Sexual risk behavior | Sexually transmitted diseases | American Journal of Public Health (journal)

Document No: 969 ; PMID: 23488494 ; PMCID: PMC3698834

Submitted by: CTN Dissemination Librarians   (3/19/2013)

How to Get the Item

 Email CTN Library (free)

 PubMed Central (free)

 Journal subscriber access

Related Protocols

NIDA-CTN-0018 NIDA-CTN-0018

Participating Nodes

Pacific Northwest Delaware Valley New York New England Consortium North Carolina Ohio Valley Pacific Region Southern Consortium Southwest Western States

Pacific Northwest | Delaware Valley | New York | New England Consortium | North Carolina | Ohio Valley | Pacific Region | Southern Consortium | Southwest | Western States

Record Permalink
https://tinyurl.com/ctnlib969


-
Supported by a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to the University of Washington Addictions, Drug & Alcohol Institute.
The materials on this site have neither been created nor reviewed by NIDA.

Powered by DB/Text WebPublisher, from Inmagic WebPublisher PRO