| AIDS Prevention for Adolescents in School |
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Science and Success, Second Edition: Sex Education and Other Programs that Work to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infections Full Study Report [HTML] [PDF] Program Components
For Use With
Evaluation Methodology
Evaluation Findings
Evaluators' comments: [This] special, theoretically and empirically based HIV/AIDS preventive curriculum was feasible to implement on a large scale in an inner-city school system, was acceptable to key constituent groups, and was associated with favorable changes in students' involvement in sexual…risk behaviors. Program DescriptionThis school-based, teacher-delivered curriculum for urban high school students seeks to increase knowledge about HIV and AIDS, build skills to recognize and prevent behaviors that put youth at risk of HIV infection, and encourage youth to make healthy decisions. Based on three theories of health behavior change (the health belief model, social cognitive theory, and a model of social influence), the curriculum emphasizes delaying the initiation of sex and, among youth who choose to have sex, consistently using condoms. The program uses role-playing and other experiential activities to enhance students' confidence and their ability to avoid risky situations. The overall goal of the program is to prevent unprotected sexual intercourse.[3] The curriculum comprises six hour-long lessons, implemented on consecutive days. The first two lessons focus on conveying correct information about HIV transmission and prevention, including:
The next two lessons focus on:
Teachers receive an eight-hour in-service training prior to implementing this curriculum, which is also suitable for use in community-based organizations.[3] Evaluation MethodologyThe study population consisted of ninth and 11th grade students (n=1,201) enrolled in required general education courses in four academic high schools in New York City. The four schools were selected on the basis of their combined demographic representation of the total population of schools in the borough and were grouped into two pairs of schools. Thirty percent of ninth grade classrooms in the first two schools were randomly selected to receive the HIV prevention curriculum. Twenty percent of ninth grade classes in the second pair of schools were randomly selected as comparison classes and received no formal HIV prevention education. At the same time, 30 percent of 11th grade classrooms in the second pair of schools received the intervention, while 20 percent of 11th grade classes in the first pair of schools acted as comparisons.[3] In evaluation, participating (n=667) and comparison (n=534) students were mostly female (59 percent). Youth were mostly black (37 percent) or Hispanic (35 percent); the remaining 28 percent of youth were mostly non-Hispanic white or Asian. The mean age of students was 15.7. Forty-eight percent were in ninth grade and 52 percent, in 11th grade. At baseline, one-third of students reported having had sex in the past three months. Among these sexually experienced students: over half reported inconsistently or never using condoms; one-fifth reported two or more sexual partners; and one in 20 reported having a high risk[*] sexual partner.[3] At baseline, 11th graders reported more risk factors (i.e., inconsistent or no use of condoms, multiple sexual partners, sex with high-risk partners, or diagnosis with an STI) than did ninth graders; males reported more risk factors than females; and blacks reported more risk factors than whites, Asians, or Hispanics. When assessed against the comparison group at baseline, a higher percentage of students in the intervention group were older, male, black or Hispanic, and held more unfavorable beliefs about the benefits of preventive action. The program's effectiveness was assessed at three-months post-intervention, when 71 percent of intervention youth and 73 percent of comparison youth completed the follow-up assessment.[3] Outcomes
Long-Term Impact
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* A high risk sexual partner was one who injected, inhaled, or smoked drugs. |








