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Paper Title

A pilot test of a self-guided, home-based intervention to improve condom-related sexual experiences, attitudes, and behaviors among young women

Keywords

  • Condom Use
  • Home-Based Intervention
  • Sexual Health
  • Young Women
  • Condom Use Errors
  • Condom-Related Attitudes
  • Self-Efficacy
  • Condom-Protected Sex
  • HIV Prevention
  • STI Prevention
  • Sexual Behavior
  • Condom Use Improvement
  • Health Promotion
  • Condom Education
  • Safe Sex Practices
  • Condom Use Consistency
  • Public Health
  • Behavioral Intervention
  • Sexual Health Programs

Article Type

Original Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 66 | Issue : 5 | Page No : 421-428

Published On

May, 2018

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Abstract

Objective: To conduct a pilot test of a brief, self-guided, home-based program designed to improve male condom use attitudes and behaviors among young women. Participants: Women aged 18–24 years from a large Midwestern University reporting having had penile–vaginal sex with two or more partners in the past 3 months. Sixty-seven enrolled; 91.0% completed the study. Methods: A repeated measures design was used, with assessments occurring at baseline, immediately post intervention (T2), and 30 days subsequent (T3). Results: Condom use errors and problems decreased, condom-related attitudes and self-efficacy improved, and experiences of condom-protected sex were rated more positively when comparing baseline with T2 and T3 scores. Further, the proportion of condom-protected episodes more than doubled between T1 and T3 for those in the lowest quartile for condom use at baseline. Conclusion: This low-resource, home-based program improved condom-related attitudes and promoted the correct and consistent use of condoms.

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