Abstract

African American young women are overwhelmingly disproportionately burdened by HIV/AIDS in the United States today. The purpose of the current systematic review was to identify the characteristics of efficacious HIV risk-reduction prevention interventions targeting African American adolescent women in order to inform future intervention development and expansion. We searched PubMed, PsychInfo, and ProQuest databases for journal articles and dissertations published between 2000 and 2015 reporting the impacts of HIV risk-reduction prevention interventions in the U.S. targeting African American adolescent women under age 25. Twenty articles assessing the efficacy of 12 interventions were eligible for inclusion. Selected interventions represented a total of 5,556 African American adolescent women and primarily drew from self-efficacy and self-empowerment-based theoretical frameworks. One intervention targeted girls under age 13; eight included participants ages 13-17; ten targeted adolescents aged 18-24 years; and five interventions included women over age 24 among their participants. Most interventions consisted of in-person knowledge and skills-based group or individual sessions led by trained African American female health professionals. Three were delivered via personal electronic devices. All programs intervened directly at the individual-level; some additionally targeted mothers, friends, or sexual partners. Overall, efficacious interventions among this population promote gender and ethnic pride, HIV risk-reduction self-efficacy, and skills building. They target multiple socio-ecological levels and tailor content to the specific age range, developmental period, and baseline behavioral characteristics of participants. However, demonstrated sustainability of program impacts to date are limited and should be addressed for program enhancements and expansions.

Highlights

  • African American young women are overwhelmingly disproportionately burdened by HIV/AIDS throughout the United States (US) today

  • African American adolescent females make up only 15 % of the US adolescent female population; yet, by the end of 2012, they comprised 64 % of the female adolescents in the US living with HIV (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2015c)

  • Search terms HIV OR ‘‘human immunodeficiency virus’’ AND ‘‘African American’’ OR black AND adolescen* OR teen* OR young OR youth* AND female* OR women OR girl* OR gender AND prevent* OR risk OR reduc* OR intervention* OR program* OR trial* OR experiment* OR efficac* OR impact* Inclusion criteria 01/01/2000–12/31/2015 Interventions Within the United States Assessing outcomes of intervention C3 months post intervention Includes control group Quantitative-conducts statistical analysis to determine efficacy Including African American adolescent women as a target population of the intervention Sample [80 % African American If males included, data analyzed by gender Mean age of participants is under 25 Exclusion criteria Interventions targeting transgender women Interventions targeting IV drug users Interventions targeting individuals living with HIV

Read more

Summary

Introduction

African American young women are overwhelmingly disproportionately burdened by HIV/AIDS throughout the United States (US) today. 1 in 32 African American women will be diagnosed with HIV in her lifetime (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2015a). This represents an infection rate 5 times higher than that of Hispanic/Latina women and 20 times higher than that of white women (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2015a). HIV-related diseases are in the top 7 leading causes of death for African American women ages 20 through 44, a statement that is not true for women of any other racial/ethnic group in the US (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2011). African American adolescent females make up only 15 % of the US adolescent female population; yet, by the end of 2012, they comprised 64 % of the female adolescents in the US living with HIV (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2015c).

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call