Grants and Contracts Details
Description
The overall aim of this study is to reduce risk behaviors and increase health and behavioral health
service utilization among disadvantaged, drug-using rural women at high-risk for HIV and HCV. This
project has potential to make a significant contribution to science by advancing knowledge about the
health disparities, high-risk behaviors (injection drug use, sex risk), and service utilization of this highrisk,
vulnerable, and understudied group of women during a time of emerging and significant public
health risk in an Appalachian rural setting. This project will incorporate standardized screening (NIDAmodified
ASSIST) to identify high-risk rural women drug users from jails, including injectors. Consenting
women (N=350) will be asked to participate in a baseline interview, and will then be randomly assigned
to one of two study groups: (1) HIV Education (HIVEd n=175) which includes the NIDA standard pre and
post-test counseling, HIV and HCV rapid testing, and an information packet on existing community drug
abuse and HIV/HCV resources; or (2) Motivational Interviewing based HIV Risk Reduction (MI-HIV n=175)
which, in addition to what is received in the HIV-Ed group, also includes an evidence-based brief
intervention for high-risk women focused on an individualized plan for enhancing motivation to reduce
risk behaviors and to use health and behavioral health services in the community. Specific aims include:
(1) to compare the effectiveness of an evidence-based HIV risk reduction intervention (MI-HIV) to HIV
Education (NIDA Standard) in reducing sex risk behaviors, injection practices, and drug use among a
culturally unique sample of disadvantaged, drug-using rural women at high-risk for HIV and HCV; and (2)
to examine MI-HIV Intervention engagement as a predictor of community health and behavioral health
service utilization (including drug treatment and mental health) at follow-up among disadvantaged, drug
using rural women at high risk for HIV and HCV. This project is innovative because it 1) targets a high-risk
and understudied group of women, 2) uses brief intervention to not only reduce risk behavior but also
to enhance motivation for using community health and behavioral health resources, and 3) utilizes a
real-world setting to identify high-risk women drug users. The long-term goal of this study is to increase
access to health and behavioral health services in order to improve the quality of health of high-risk
rural women.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 7/15/12 → 6/30/20 |
Funding
- National Institute on Drug Abuse: $934,902.00
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