O'Leary Ann, Hoff Colleen C, Purcell David W, Gómez Cynthia A, Parsons Jeffrey T, Hardnett Felicia, Lyles Cynthia M
Divisions of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road, MS E-37, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
AIDS. 2005 Apr;19 Suppl 1:S111-21. doi: 10.1097/01.aids.0000167357.94664.10.
We wished to identify which potential mediators of the Seropositive Urban Men's Intervention Trial (SUMIT) intervention were in fact changed by the intervention, and further to identify which among these factors distinguished men who decreased their risk behavior relative to those who increased it, irrespective of the intervention arm.
We examined social cognitive theory and other psychosocial variables that the intervention was designed to affect (potential mediators) in both sets of analyses. These were assessed at baseline, 3-month follow-up, and 6-month follow-up. We tested which potential mediators were changed by the intervention relative to the comparison arm, and which of these factors distinguished men discontinuing risk behavior [unprotected insertive anal intercourse (UIAI) or UIAI with HIV-negative or status-unknown partners] compared with those initiating it.
Factors changed by the intervention included partner serostatus assumption making, hedonistic condom outcome expectancies, anxiety and depression. Factors associated with behavioral risk reduction included personal responsibility to protect others from infection and self-evaluative outcome expectancies regarding transmission risk behavior. These constructs are similar and involve the engagement of moral processes and altruism in sexual behavior with others.
The present results suggest that, although we designed the intervention to enhance personal responsibility to protect others from HIV, we were not successful in this goal. However, changes in this factor did prove to be an important correlate of behavior change. Possible ways to design and deliver more successful interventions are discussed.
我们希望确定血清反应阳性城市男性干预试验(SUMIT)干预措施的哪些潜在中介因素实际上因该干预而发生了变化,并进一步确定在这些因素中,哪些因素能够区分出相对于增加风险行为的男性而言,减少了风险行为的男性,而不考虑干预组。
在两组分析中,我们研究了社会认知理论以及该干预措施旨在影响的其他心理社会变量(潜在中介因素)。这些变量在基线、3个月随访和6个月随访时进行评估。我们测试了相对于对照组,哪些潜在中介因素因干预而发生了变化,以及这些因素中的哪些能够区分停止风险行为(无保护插入式肛门性交[UIAI]或与HIV阴性或状况不明的性伴进行UIAI)的男性与开始此类行为的男性。
因干预而发生变化的因素包括对性伴血清学状态的假设、享乐主义的避孕套结果预期、焦虑和抑郁。与行为风险降低相关的因素包括保护他人免受感染的个人责任以及对传播风险行为的自我评估结果预期。这些结构相似,并且涉及在与他人的性行为中道德过程和利他主义的参与。
目前的结果表明,尽管我们设计该干预措施是为了增强保护他人免受HIV感染的个人责任,但我们在这一目标上并不成功。然而,这一因素的变化确实被证明是行为改变的一个重要相关因素。本文讨论了设计和实施更成功干预措施的可能方法。