Abstract

Few interventions have targeted perceived stress as a co-occurring construct central to substance use and subsequent HIV/AIDS risk reduction among African American urban young adults. The Color It Real Program was a seven session, weekly administered age-specific and culturally-tailored intervention designed to provide substance abuse and HIV education and reduce perceived stress among African Americans ages 18 to 24 in Atlanta, GA. Effectiveness was assessed through a quasi-experimental study design that consisted of intervention (n = 122) and comparison (n = 70) groups completing a pre- and post-intervention survey. A series of Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) tests were used to assess pre- to post-intervention changes between study groups. For intervention participants, perceived stress levels were significantly reduced by the end of the intervention (t(70) = 2.38, p = 0.020), condom use at last sexual encounter significantly increased (F = 4.43, p = 0.0360), intervention participants were significantly less likely to drink five or more alcoholic drinks in one sitting (F = 5.10, p = 0.0245), and to use clean needles when injecting the drug (F = 36.99, p = 0.0001). This study is among the first of its kind to incorporate stress management as an integral approach to HIV/SA prevention. The program has implications for the design of other community-based, holistic approaches to addressing substance use and risky behaviors for young adults.

Highlights

  • Substance abuse by young adults often leads to risky behavior and adverse health outcomes.Substance use increases the likelihood of high risk sexual behaviors such as not using condoms, when combined with illicit drugs and alcohol use [1]

  • The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the Color It Real program in increasing condom use, and reducing substance abuse and perceived stress levels among African

  • Our total sample size comprised of 192 participants who completed pre-test and post-test surveys—122 participants in intervention group and 70 participants in comparison group

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Summary

Introduction

Substance abuse by young adults often leads to risky behavior and adverse health outcomes. Substance use increases the likelihood of high risk sexual behaviors such as not using condoms, when combined with illicit drugs and alcohol use [1]. This risky mix is found to be the most causal risk factor for transmission of HIV/AIDS among African American young adults [2,3]. Risky sexual behavior includes the lack of condom use during sex, unplanned sex, lack of perceived risk or awareness, lack of testing, multiple partners, and alcohol and substance abuse [4,5,6,7]. Public Health 2016, 13, 51; doi:10.3390/ijerph13010051 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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