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This study compared the predictive value of the theory of planned behavior in university students in South Africa (N = 251) and the United States (N = 160) who completed an anonymous self-administered questionnaire. Multiple regression analyses revealed that condom use and intention were significantly predicted by positive condom attitude, subjective norm, self-efficacy, and attending university in South Africa. Significant interactions between country and predictors indicated that subjective norm predicted condom use and intention more strongly in the American sample than in the South African sample; attitude predicted intention more strongly in the American sample than in the South African sample; but self-efficacy predicted intention more strongly in the South African sample than in the American sample. The theory of planned behavior may provide a useful framework for interventions to reduce South African students' risk of HIV/and sexuality transmitted diseases. Such interventions should especially focus on building self-efficacy to use condoms.  相似文献   
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Few studies have investigated mediator effects of HIV prevention interventions on adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa. Herein, we report on a secondary analysis of an intervention that increased intentions to use condoms, abstain from sexual intercourse, and seek safe male circumcision among adolescents in Botswana. In a study conducted in Botswana, 806 grade 9 students from 21 public Junior Secondary Schools were randomly assigned to either the OWN THE FUTURE: Pulling Together We Will” ( PTWW) intervention group or a health promotion control group. Both conditions consisted of 12 1-h modules, with two modules delivered during each of the six sessions on six consecutive school days. The students in both groups completed confidential computer-based surveys at several time points: pre-, immediately post-, 3, 6, and 12 months post-intervention. Mediation was assessed using the product-of-coefficients approach in a generalized estimating equations (GEE) framework. The analyses showed that condom use beliefs were significant mediators of the intervention effect on the intention to consistently use condoms over time. Also, negative socio-cultural beliefs, prevention beliefs, and HIV/STI knowledge were significant mediators of the intervention’s effects on the intention to abstain from sex. Additionally, normative beliefs, prevention beliefs, parental negotiation, and circumcision knowledge were significant mediators of the intervention’s effect on intention to seek safe male circumcision. The mediation analysis delineated a theoretical model and isolated activities that positively impact condom use, abstinence from sex, and circumcision intentions of Batswana middle school adolescents.

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When children know their HIV serostatus, they are more likely to cooperate with steps to manage their health and the risk of transmitting HIV to others. Mounting evidence indicates that caregivers often do not disclose to HIV-positive children that the children are living with HIV, but little is known about the modifiable determinants of pediatric HIV disclosure. The present study examined theory-of-planned-behavior predictors of the intention to disclose to children their HIV diagnosis. The participants were 100 caregivers of HIV-positive children in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa. Proportional-odds logistic regression analysis revealed that normative support for disclosure and caregiver-child communication predicted the intention to disclose, whereas behavioral beliefs regarding the consequences of disclosing and self-efficacy to disclose did not. The results suggest that interventions to increase pediatric HIV disclosure in South Africa should help caregivers enlist support for disclosure among important referents and improve communication with their HIV-infected children.  相似文献   
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Although considerable research has examined the influence of parent-adolescent relationships on the sexual health of adolescents, there is a great need for research to understand the influence of fathers on their children’s HIV sexual risk behavior, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. We examined how the residence and the involvement of fathers are related to their children’s HIV sexual risk and alcohol consumption behaviors. A cross-sectional survey was completed by 175 sixth-grade adolescents in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa. Analyses showed that adolescents living with their fathers had fewer sexual partners (B?=?? 0.606, SE?=?0.299, p?=?.043) and consumed alcohol less frequently (B?=?? 0.642, SE?=?0.294, p?=?.029). Adolescents who spent more quality days with their fathers in the past 30 days had fewer sexual partners (B?=?? 0.103, SE?=?0.039, p?=?.008) and had condomless sex less frequently (B?=?? 0.097, SE?=?0.047, p?=?0.041). It was also found that there were significant father-residence?×?child-gender interactions on sexual debut (B?=?1.132, SE?=?0.564, p?=?.045) and on frequency of condomless sex (B?=?? 2.140, SE?=?0.924, p?=?.021). These interactions indicate that boys living with their fathers were less likely to have had vaginal intercourse than girls and that girls living with their fathers were less likely to have unprotected sex than boys. This study highlights the importance of South African fathers’ roles in their adolescent children’s HIV sexual risk and alcohol drinking behaviors and the need to promote father-child relationships for adolescent health. The results suggest that health programs aiming to reduce South African adolescents’ HIV sexual risk behaviors and alcohol consumption consider strategies that target their fathers.

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Objectives. We tested the efficacy of a sexual risk-reduction intervention for men in South Africa, where heterosexual exposure is the main mode of HIV transmission.Methods. Matched-pairs of neighborhoods in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa, were randomly selected and within pairs randomized to 1 of 2 interventions based on social cognitive theory and qualitative research: HIV/sexually transmitted infection (STI) risk-reduction, targeting condom use, or attention-matched control, targeting health issues unrelated to sexual risks. Sexually active men aged 18 to 45 years were eligible. The primary outcome was consistent condom use in the past 3 months.Results. Of 1181 participants, 1106 (93.6%) completed the 12-month follow-up. HIV and STI risk-reduction participants had higher odds of reporting consistent condom use (odds ratio [OR] = 1.32; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.03, 1.71) and condom use at last vaginal intercourse (OR = 1.40; 95% CI = 1.08, 1.82) than did attention-control participants, adjusting for baseline prevalence. No differences were observed on unprotected intercourse or multiple partnerships. Findings did not differ for sex with steady as opposed to casual partners.Conclusions. Behavioral interventions specifically targeting men can contribute to efforts to reduce sexual risk behaviors in South Africa.South Africa has more HIV cases than any other country, and like other sub-Saharan countries, has a predominantly heterosexual epidemic.1 In such an epidemic, men have an especially critical role to play: they are the ones who don male condoms, a particularly effective and available means of prevention, and thus control their use. They have, it has been argued, more power than women in relationships2–4 and are responsible for infecting women in many contexts, including forced intercourse and violence.3 Although calls for male responsibility in sexual behavior related to HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) have been made repeatedly,5–7 to our knowledge, only 1 study has evaluated an intervention created specifically for heterosexual men in South Africa.8 Men who received the gender-based-violence-and-HIV-risk-reduction intervention were more likely to report talking with a partner about condoms and using condoms consistently 1-month postintervention compared with men in an alcohol-and-HIV-risk-reduction control intervention.The present study evaluated an HIV/sexually transmitted infection (STI) risk-reduction intervention for South African men who have intercourse with women. We used a cluster-randomized design to reduce the potential for contamination between treatment arms that would be present if we were to randomize individuals. We randomized randomly selected neighborhoods (i.e., clusters) to a 3-session intervention based on social cognitive theory9 and extensive formative research10 and designed to reduce HIV/STI risk behavior or to a 3-session attention-control intervention designed to promote health by improving diet and physical activity. We hypothesized that the HIV/STI risk-reduction intervention would increase self-reported consistent condom use during vaginal intercourse in the postintervention period, the primary outcome, compared with the attention-control intervention, controlling for baseline condom use.  相似文献   
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BACKGROUND: Almost half (49%) of the people diagnosed with HIV/AIDS in the United States (US) are African-Americans. Although African-Americans represent only about 13% of the overall population, they continue to account for a higher proportion of cases at all stages of HIV/AIDS. Most documented interventions targeting the African-American population have focused on women, children, men who have sex with men or drug addicts. METHODS: Six focus group sessions with African-American men (39) and women (15) were conducted in a heterogeneously populated American city. We used a pre-focus group questionnaire to collect data about the socio-economic background of the participants. In our focus group sessions we examined the feasibility of instituting a health promotion program for African-American men. RESULTS: The men who participated in the sessions showed great interest in attending the health promotion program. They had no prior knowledge of positive behavioral practices that could promote their individual health and well-being. HIV infection rates in the African-American population remain the highest in the US. CONCLUSION: The results of our focus group sessions showed that the heterosexual African-American men were eager to learn how to protect themselves against communicable and non-communicable diseases in health promotion programs.  相似文献   
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The present study aimed to correlate the Z-scoring system to outcomes in in vitro fertilisation (IVF) cycles performed in conjunction with preimplantation genetic diagnosis. In 178 cycles, a total of 468 pronuclear embryos was scored prospectively using the Z score before culture and biopsy on Day 3 to detect chromosomes 13, 16, 18, 21, 22, X and Y. The results showed significant differences between Z1 and Z4 scoring embryos, with Z1 giving an increased biopsy rate (83.3% v. 51.1%), embryo quality (> or = fair: 83.3% v. 57.8%) and embryo growth rate (> or = six cells: 87.0% v. 44.4%). The incidence of chromosomally normal embryos decreased from Z1 to Z4 (Z1: 40%; Z2: 29.7%; Z3: 22.7%; Z4: 13.6%; P < 0.04). Thus, the Z scoring, mainly Z1 and Z4, correlated significantly with the expected embryo outcomes and preimplantation genetic diagnosis findings. Further improvement of pronuclear scoring with the use of a two-stage assessment is proposed.  相似文献   
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This study tested hypotheses regarding attitudinal and normative influences on intentions to use condoms, a practice that would reduce women's risk of sexually transmitted HIV infection. Participants were 103 sexually active unmarried black women undergraduates at an inner-city commuter university, in an area with a high rate of reported AIDS cases among women. Consistent with the theory of reasoned action, multiple regression analysis on women's anonymous responses to a mailed survey revealed that those who registered more favorable attitudes toward condoms and those who perceived subjective norms more supportive of condom use reported firmer intentions to use condoms in the next three months. Key behavioral beliefs related to attitudes centered on the adverse effects of condom use on sexual enjoyment. Key normative influences were respondents' sexual partners and mothers. However, women's own attitudes were a stronger determinant of intentions to use condoms than were their perceptions of normative influences, particularly among women with above-average AIDS knowledge. The results suggest that the theory of reasoned action provides a potentially useful conceptual framework for interventions to change a key AIDS risk behavior among women.  相似文献   
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