Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Maryland at College Park, MD 20742, USA.
AIDS Behav. 2012 Oct;16(7):1949-60. doi: 10.1007/s10461-011-0106-9.
There is increasing excitement about multimedia sexually transmitted infection (STI) and HIV prevention interventions, yet there has been limited discussion of how use of multimedia technology may improve STI/HIV prevention efforts. The purpose of this paper is to describe the mechanisms through which multimedia technology may work to improve the delivery and uptake of intervention material. We present conceptual frameworks describing how multimedia technology may improve intervention delivery by increasing standardization and fidelity to the intervention material and the participant's ability to learn by improving attention, cognition, emotional engagement, skills-building, and uptake of sensitive material about sexual and drug risks. In addition, we describe how the non-multimedia behavioral STI/HIV prevention intervention, Project WORTH, was adapted into a multimedia format for women involved in the criminal justice system and provide examples of how multimedia activities can more effectively target key mediators of behavioral change in this intervention.
人们对多媒体性传播感染(STI)和艾滋病毒预防干预措施越来越感兴趣,但对于多媒体技术如何能够改善 STI/艾滋病预防工作,讨论却很有限。本文旨在描述多媒体技术可能发挥作用的机制,以改善干预材料的提供和采用。我们提出了概念框架,描述了多媒体技术如何通过提高干预材料的标准化和保真度以及通过提高注意力、认知、情感参与、技能培养和对性风险和毒品风险的敏感材料的采用,来提高干预的提供,从而改善参与者的学习能力。此外,我们还描述了如何将非多媒体行为性 STI/艾滋病预防干预措施 Project WORTH 改编为针对参与刑事司法系统的妇女的多媒体形式,并举例说明了多媒体活动如何更有效地针对该干预措施中行为改变的关键调节因素。