Reducing HIV incidence among
adolescents represents an urgent global priority. Structural change approaches
to HIV prevention may reduce youth risk by addressing the economic, social,
cultural, and political factors that elevate it.
We assessed whether
achievement of structural changes made by eight Connect-to-Protect (C2P)
coalitions were associated with improvements in youth's views of their
community over the first 4 years of coalitions' mobilization. We recruited
annual cross-sectional samples of targeted youth from each C2P community. We
sampled youth in neighborhood venues. We interviewed a total of 2461 youth over
4 years. Males (66 %) and youth of color comprised the majority
(52 % Hispanic/Latinos; 41 % African Americans) of those interviewed.
By year 4, youth reported greater satisfaction with their community as a
youth-supportive setting. They reported their needs were better met by
available community resources compared with year 1. However, these findings
were moderated by risk population such that those from communities where C2P
focused on young men who have sex with men (YMSM) reported no changes over time
whereas those from communities focused on other at-risk youth reported
significant improvements over time in satisfaction and resource needs being
met. Internalized HIV stigma increased over time among those from communities
serving other at-risk youth and was unchanged among those from YMSM
communities.
The very different results we observe over time between
communities focused on YMSM versus other at-risk youth may suggest it is
unreasonable to assume identical chains of structural causality across youth
populations who have such different historical relationships to HIV and who
encounter very different kinds of entrenched discrimination within their
communities.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/AKOUld
By: Miller RL1, Janulis PF2, Reed SJ3, Harper GW4, Ellen J5, Boyer CB6; Adolescent Medicine Trials Network for HIV/AIDS Interventions.
- 1Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA. Mill1493@msu.edu.
- 2Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA. Patrick.janulis@northwestern.edu.
- 3Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA. Reedsar3@gmail.com.
- 4University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA. gwharper@umich.edu.
- 5Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA. jellen@jhmi.edu.
- 6University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA. Cherrie.boyer@ucsf.edu.
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