TY - JOUR
T1 - Examination of the relationship between psychosocial mediators and intervention effects in It's your game
T2 - An effective HIV/STI/pregnancy prevention intervention for middle school students
AU - Baumler, Elizabeth
AU - Glassman, Jill
AU - Tortolero, Susan
AU - Markham, Christine
AU - Shegog, Ross
AU - Peskin, Melissa
AU - Addy, Robert
AU - Franks, Heather
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - A set of mediation analyses were carried out in this study using data from It's Your Game.Keep It Real (IYG), a successful HIV/STI/pregnancy prevention program. The IYG study evaluated a skill and normbased. HIV/STI/pregnancy prevention program that was implemented from 2004 to 2007 among 907 urban low-income middle school youth in Houston, TX, USA. Analyses were carried out to investigate the degree to which a set of proposed psychosocial measures of behavioral knowledge, perceived self-efficacy, behavioral, and normative beliefs, and perceived risky situations, all targeted by the intervention, mediated the intervention's effectiveness in reducing initiation of sex. The mediation process was assessed by examining the significance and size of the estimated effects from the mediating pathways. The findings from this study provide evidence that the majority of the psychosocial mediators targeted by the IYG intervention are indeed related to the desired behavior and provide evidence that the conceptual theory underlying the targeted psychosocial mediators in the intervention is appropriate. Two of the psychosocial mediators significantly mediated the intervention effect, knowledge of STI signs and symptoms and refusal self-efficacy. This study suggests that the underlying causal mechanisms of action of these interventions are complex and warrant further analyses.
AB - A set of mediation analyses were carried out in this study using data from It's Your Game.Keep It Real (IYG), a successful HIV/STI/pregnancy prevention program. The IYG study evaluated a skill and normbased. HIV/STI/pregnancy prevention program that was implemented from 2004 to 2007 among 907 urban low-income middle school youth in Houston, TX, USA. Analyses were carried out to investigate the degree to which a set of proposed psychosocial measures of behavioral knowledge, perceived self-efficacy, behavioral, and normative beliefs, and perceived risky situations, all targeted by the intervention, mediated the intervention's effectiveness in reducing initiation of sex. The mediation process was assessed by examining the significance and size of the estimated effects from the mediating pathways. The findings from this study provide evidence that the majority of the psychosocial mediators targeted by the IYG intervention are indeed related to the desired behavior and provide evidence that the conceptual theory underlying the targeted psychosocial mediators in the intervention is appropriate. Two of the psychosocial mediators significantly mediated the intervention effect, knowledge of STI signs and symptoms and refusal self-efficacy. This study suggests that the underlying causal mechanisms of action of these interventions are complex and warrant further analyses.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84873802053&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84873802053&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1155/2012/298494
DO - 10.1155/2012/298494
M3 - Article
C2 - 22811892
AN - SCOPUS:84873802053
SN - 2090-1240
VL - 2012
JO - AIDS Research and Treatment
JF - AIDS Research and Treatment
M1 - 298494
ER -