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Washington University
School of Medicine
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Enrolling and Retaining Female Offenders in
HIV Trials (STOP)
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Project Title |
Enrolling and
Retaining Female Offenders in HIV Trials (STOP) |
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Funding Source |
National
Institute of Nursing Research NINR |
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Project Dates |
09/15/04 -
06/30/09 |
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Project Number |
NR009180 |
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Team |
Principal Investigator-
Linda B. Cottler, PhD, MPH
Co-Investigators-
Renee Cunningham-Williams, PhD, MPE
(2004-2005)
Bradley Stoner, MD, PhD
Co-Investigator, Intervention Specialist-
Catherine Striley, Ph.D., LCSW
Project Manager-
Catina Callahan, MSW
Project Coordinator-
Marisa Jaffe
Research Statistician-
Arbi Ben Abdallah, MS
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Abstract
This project responds to PAS-03-168 which
seeks to recruit and retain women and minorities for HIV/AIDS research
trials. The Sisters Teaching Options for Prevention project (STOP) has two
goals: it will enroll and retain a severely difficult to reach population
of women—poor, inner city, female arrestees—who, despite their high risk,
have been largely overlooked for HIV/AIDS research to date. Secondly, it
will initiate strategies to correct barriers to participation in research,
a recent goal of NIAID. The methods for recruitment, retention and
intervention are based on this team’s decade and a half of community based
behavioral interventions aimed at reducing high risk behaviors. Grounded
in the Health Belief Model, the proposed peer-delivered case management
intervention provides the tools to facilitate self-directed change. Our
community-based research consistently shows four key barriers to high risk
women’s participation in research: lack of transportation, fear and
distrust, misperceptions of and risks for disease, and a research
community that favors healthier populations perceived to be “more
compliant”. Because the rate of HIV risky behaviors is highest among this
group of women both locally and nationally, interventions for them at this
critical juncture are imperative. The aims of the STOP project are to:
1. Adapt a culturally-relevant, gender-specific, community-based,
theoretically-driven Peer Partnered behavioral intervention for a
randomized clinical trial (RCT) to reduce HIV risk behaviors, and
facilitate access to needed services and research protocols.
2. Reach a difficult to recruit
population of women—female offenders—in need of HIV/STD testing,
counseling, and medical and behavioral interventions.
3. Enroll these women into this RCT,
and retain them with high response rates, comparing a standard
intervention to a Peer Partnered Case Management Intervention (PPCMI).
4. Assess the effectiveness of the Peer Partnered Case Management
Intervention at 3 and 6 months to facilitate access to needed services, to
reduce barriers to service access, to reduce high risk behaviors, to
increase knowledge of HIV and other STDs, and to improve trust in and
understanding of research involvement.
5. Disseminate the PPCMI model and findings locally, nationally and
internationally.
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Projects
National Monitoring of Adolescent Prescription Stimulants Study (N-MAPSS)
Prescription Drug Misuse,
Abuse and Dependence
Club Drug Use, Abuse, and Dependence
International Supplement
STD Supplement
Women
Teaching Women - (WTW)
Improving Treatment Services for Substance Abusers with Comorbid Depression
(SAD)
Sister
to Sister - (STS)
Nosology
Over-the-Counter Syringe Purchase in Four Communities
Analyses to Improve Reduction in Crack Use
Each
One Teach One - (EOTO)
Substance Abuse and Risk for AIDS - (SARA)
St.
Louis' Effort to Reduce the Spread of AIDS and IVDUs - (ERSA)
Community Based HIV Prevention Among Females at Risk in Bangalore INDIA
Deconstructing HIV Interventions Among Female Offenders
Enrolling and Retaining Female Offenders in HIV Trials
Collaborative MDMA and Other Club Drugs Study
Evaluating the Social Structure of a Local Heroin Market (NIDA-funded)
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