AnInterventiontoRedu ce

Uploaded from authorPOINTLite
Views:
 
Category: Entertainment
     
 

Presentation Description

No description available.

Comments

Presentation Transcript

An Intervention to Reduce HIV-Related Stigma Among African American Communities in South Carolina: 

An Intervention to Reduce HIV-Related Stigma Among African American Communities in South Carolina John B. Pryor, Ph.D. Department of Psychology Illinois State University Bambi Gaddist, DrPH South Carolina HIV/AIDS Council Letitia Johnson-Arnold, MSPH South Carolina HIV/AIDS Council 6/13/2005, 3:30-5:00 PM Session Number:M3-C17-05, Location:Embassy-Hong Kong Funded by the Academy for Educational Development Presentation at the 2005 National HIV Prevention Conference

Outline of Today’s Talk: 

Background - HIV in South Carolina South Carolina HIV/AIDS Council General Survey 2003-2004 Some comparisons of the General Survey to a national probability sample A conceptual model of stigma An Intervention Evaluation No evidence for an immediate impact of the intervention Implications of intervention survey for factors affecting stigma avoidance Some connections between stigma and prevention behavior Outline of Today’s Talk

Background: 

Background Approximately 201 of every 100,000 adults and adolescents in South Carolina are living with HIV and another 185 per 100,000 are living with AIDS (CDC, 2003). The number of AIDS cases among African Americans in South Carolina is higher than that among any other ethnic/racial group. The prevalence among Blacks is ten times that of Whites in South Carolina (CDC, 2004).

South Carolina HIV/AIDS Council: 

South Carolina HIV/AIDS Council Three-prong initiative to reduce HIV-related stigma among African American communities throughout South Carolina: Organizing educational town hall meetings in rural communities Developing and staging an educational theatre production concerning HIV/AIDS stigma and discrimination A statewide media campaign

General Survey 2003-2004: 

Survey instrument was based upon national telephone surveys conducted by Herek and his colleagues in 1991, 1997, & 1999 (Herek, Capitanio, & Widaman, 2002) SCHAC General Survey sample was recruited from attendees at town hall meetings and theatrical performances organized by SCHAC Herek 1999 national probability sample: 669 adults SCHAC 2003-2004 sample: 403 African American adults in South Carolina General Survey 2003-2004

Slide6: 

Bars in pink represent 95% confidence intervals for national probability survey SCHAC survey items not in Herek survey more avoidance

Slide7: 

Bars in pink represent 95% confidence intervals for national probability survey

Slide8: 

Bars in pink represent 95% confidence intervals for national probability survey more misconceptions

Slide9: 

Bars in pink represent 95% confidence intervals for national probability survey

Slide10: 

Bars in pink represent 95% confidence intervals for national probability survey

Summary: 

Summary Compared to the national probability sample, the SCHAC sample of African American adults in SC Displayed more avoidant intentions in 2 out of 3 measures Were less likely to blame PLWHA Displayed more misconceptions about transmission in 3 out of 5 measures Indicated much less comfort with PLWHA in only 1 out of 4 measures Indicated somewhat less negative emotions in 2 out of 3 measures

A conceptual model of HIV-related stigma: 

A conceptual model of HIV-related stigma

Conceptual Model of Psychological Reactions to Stigma: 

Conceptual Model of Psychological Reactions to Stigma Cognitive Responses Approach/ Avoidance Behaviors Emotional Reactions

Slide14: 

Avoidance of PLWHA Comfort- PLWHA Negative Emotions- PLWHA Blame Belief in Casual Contact Cognitive Affective Behavioral Components of Stigma in General Survey

Slide15: 

Avoidance of PLWHA ß=.26* ß=.34* ß=-.43* ß=.29* Step 1 Step 2 R2=.25, F(2,367)=59.65, p<.01 R2=.49, Fchange(2,365)=85.46, p<.01 *p<.05 Hierarchical Multiple Regression Predicting Avoidance Intentions Blame Belief in Casual Contact Comfort- PLWHA Negative Emotions- PLWHA STUDY 1

Slide16: 

Avoidance of PLWHA Comfort- PLWHA Negative Emotions- PLWHA Belief in Casual Contact Blame ß=-.48* ß=.30* ß=.04 ß=.11* Step 1 Step 2 R2=.48, F(2,367)=166.76, p<.01 R2=.49, Fchange(2,365)=3.51, p<.01 *p<.05 Hierarchical Multiple Regression Predicting Avoidance Intentions STUDY 1

Summary: 

Summary Avoidance intentions are related to both cognitive and affective components of stigma Affective components seem to account for more unique variance in avoidance intentions

An intervention evaluation: 

An intervention evaluation

Intervention: 

Intervention Play about HIV infection in African American families Themes: Forgiveness Family support Tolerance It could happen to you

Design of Intervention Evaluation: 

Design of Intervention Evaluation Recruitment From the African American Community Delay Play Discussion Survey Survey Play Discussion

Constructs Measured in the Intervention Survey: 

Constructs Measured in the Intervention Survey Empathy for persons living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) (=.82) Negative emotions for PLWHA (=.77) Blame (=.50) Beliefs in transmission via causal contact (=.82) Avoidance tendencies regarding PLWHA (=.82) Attitudes about being tested (=.89) Motivation to control prejudice regarding PLWHA (=.79) Superstitious contagion beliefs () Attitudes toward MSM and WSW (=.87, =.93) Personal contact with MSM and WSW () Positive religious beliefs regarding PLWHA (=.67) Support for coercive social policies (=.80)

Summary of the Analyses from the Intervention Survey: 

Summary of the Analyses from the Intervention Survey There were no statistically significant differences between the two intervention conditions across any of the constructs Participants in intervention study were from Richland County (pop=334,609) 3/4 of General Survey sample were from counties with less than 100,000 population Comparisons between measures common across the Intervention Survey and the General Survey revealed that participants in the intervention blamed PLWHAs less than people from counties less than 100,000; they also indicated weaker avoidance intentions than people from counties less than 100,000 Ironically, participants in the intervention displayed certain negative emotions more than all others from the General Survey

Examining the HIV-related stigma conceptual model: 

Examining the HIV-related stigma conceptual model

Slide24: 

Avoidance of PLWHA Empathy- PLWHA Negative Emotions- PLWHA Blame Belief in Casual Contact Cognitive Affective Behavioral Components of Stigma in Intervention Survey

Slide25: 

Avoidance of PLWHA ß=.22† ß=.07 ß=-.23* ß=.33* Step 1 Step 2 R2=.06, F(2,72)=2.16, P=.12 R2=.19, Fchange(2,70)=5.85, p<.01 *p<.05 †p<.07 Hierarchical Multiple Regression Predicting Avoidance Intentions Blame Belief in Casual Contact Empathy- PLWHA Negative Emotions- PLWHA STUDY 2

Slide26: 

Avoidance of PLWHA Empathy- PLWHA Negative Emotions- PLWHA Belief in Casual Contact Blame ß=-.24* ß=.35* ß=.05 ß=-.01 Step 1 Step 2 R2=.19, F(2,72)=8.41, p<.01 R2=.19, Fchange(2,70)<1, NS *p<.05 Hierarchical Multiple Regression Predicting Avoidance Intentions STUDY 2

Summary: 

Summary Affective components were more strongly related to variance in avoidance intentions than cognitive components of stigma

Why should prevention researchers be concerned with HIV-related stigma?: 

Why should prevention researchers be concerned with HIV-related stigma?

Slide29: 

Attitude Toward HIV Testing ß=-.30* ß=.11 ß=.38* ß=.01 Step 1 Step 2 R2=.09, F(2,77)=3.34 P<.05 R2=.22, Fchange(2,75)=6.21, p<.01 *p<.05 Hierarchical Multiple Regression Predicting Attitudes toward HIV Testing Blame Belief in Casual Contact Empathy- PLWHA Negative Emotions- PLWHA STUDY 2

Slide30: 

Attitude Toward HIV Testing Empathy- PLWHA Negative Emotions- PLWHA Belief in Casual Contact Blame ß=.43* ß=-.04 ß=.-.19 ß=.06 Step 1 Step 2 R2=.19, F(2,77)=8.88, p<.01 R2=.22, Fchange(2,75)=1.47, NS *p<.05 Hierarchical Multiple Regression Predicting Attitudes toward HIV Testing STUDY 2

Summary: 

Summary Empathy for PLWHAs was a relatively strong predictor of attitudes toward testing People who felt empathy/compassion for PLWHAs held more positive attitudes toward being tested themselves or encouraging their family & friends to be tested

Future Directions: 

Future Directions Our analyses of survey data suggest that anti-stigma interventions might focus upon encouraging empathy for PLWHAs Interventions that encourage empathy/compassion for PLWHAs may also have an impact upon attitudes toward HIV testing A focus upon empathy/compassion may be well received in faith communities

Special thanks to the following people who helped in data analyses for this project: 

Special thanks to the following people who helped in data analyses for this project Jamie Hughes Leah Pryor

Slide34: 

Correlation Matrix from Intervention Study Correlations in yellow are statistically significant, p < .05