Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1070018 | Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2013 | 6 Pages |
BackgroundOnly 56% of outpatient substance abuse treatment programs in the U.S. provide HIV/AIDS education, likely due to the time required to complete existing educational interventions. This report describes results of a third study in a series to develop a brief educational intervention to increase HIV/AIDS knowledge among cocaine-dependent outpatients.MethodsParticipants (N = 90) were randomized to experimental or control conditions and completed two HIV/AIDS knowledge pre-tests with response formats modified to “true–false–don’t know.” Pre-test results were later compared to historical controls that completed pre-tests in their original “true–false” format. Next, participants in the experimental condition completed an HIV/AIDS educational intervention while participants in the control condition completed a sham intervention. Participants in both conditions then completed knowledge tests a second time. Participants in both conditions were subsequently crossed over, and then completed knowledge tests a third time. Post-intervention analyses were conducted using test data from all participants who completed the educational intervention (N = 56). A subset of these participants (N = 40) completed follow-up tests approximately 9 weeks after completing the educational intervention.ResultsScores on both pre-tests were lower than those observed in historical controls (p < .001). Scores on knowledge tests increased from baseline after participants completed the educational intervention (p < .001), but not after the sham intervention (p > .05). Scores at follow-up remained higher than baseline scores (p < .001).ConclusionsModifying response formats to include a “don’t know” option likely increases identification of baseline knowledge deficits. This brief intervention is effective at increasing HIV/AIDS knowledge among cocaine-dependent outpatients.