Abstract
Few behavioral interventions have been conducted to reduce high-risk sexual behavior among HIV-positive Men who have Sex with Men (HIV+ MSM). Hence, we lack well-proven interventions for this population. Positive Connections is a randomized controlled trial (n = 675 HIV+ MSM) comparing the effects of two sexual health seminars—for HIV+ MSM and all MSM—with a contrast prevention video arm. Baseline, 6-, 12- and 18-month follow-up surveys assessed psychosexual variables and frequency of serodiscordant unprotected anal intercourse (SDUAI). At post-test, intentions to avoid transmission were significantly higher in the sexual health arms. However, SDUAI frequency decreased equally across arms. HIV+ MSM engaging in SDUAI at baseline were more likely to leave the study. Tailoring interventions to HIV+ MSM did not increase their effectiveness in this study. A sexual health approach appeared as effective as an untailored video-based HIV prevention intervention in reducing SDUAI among HIV+ MSM.





Similar content being viewed by others
Explore related subjects
Discover the latest articles and news from researchers in related subjects, suggested using machine learning.References
Bell, A., & Weinberg, M. (1981). Homosexualities: A study of diversity among men and women. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
Buchacz, K., Greenberg, A., Onorato, I., & Janssen, R. S. (2005). Syphilis epidemics and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) incidence among men who have sex with men in the United States: Implications for HIV prevention. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 32(10), S73–S79.
Bullough, V. L. (1994). Science in the bedroom: A history of sex research. New York, NY: Basic Books.
Carballo-Diéguez, A., Dolezal, C., Leu, C.-S., Nieves, L., Díaz, F., Decena, C., et al. (2005). A randomized controlled trial to test an HIV-prevention intervention for Latino gay and bisexual men: Lessons learned. AIDS Care, 17(3), 314–328.
Centers for Disease Control, Prevention. (1999). Resurgent bacterial sexually transmitted disease among men who have sex with men—King County, Washington, 1997–1999. MMWR. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 48, 773–777.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2001). No turning back: Addressing the HIV crisis among men who have sex with men. Retrieved September 23, 2009, from http://www.thebody.com/content/art29892.html.
Centers for Disease Control, Prevention. (2008a). HIV/AIDS and Men who have Sex with Men (MSM). Atlanta, GA: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Centers for Disease Control, Prevention. (2008b). HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, 2006 (Vol. 18). Atlanta, GA: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Cleary, P. D., Van Devanter, N., Steilen, M., Stuart, A., Shipton-Levy, R., McMullen, W., et al. (1995). A randomized trial of an education and support program for HIV-infected individuals. AIDS, 9, 1271–1278.
Crepaz, N., Lyles, C. M., Wolitski, R. J., Passin, W. F., Rama, S. M., Herbst, J. H., et al. (2005). Do prevention interventions reduce HIV risk behaviours among people living with HIV? A meta-analytic review of controlled trials. AIDS, 20, 143–157.
Elford, J., Bolding, G., & Sherr, L. (2001). HIV optimism: Fact or fiction? FOCUS, 8, 1–3.
Fenton, K. A., & Imrie, J. (2005). Increasing rates of sexually transmitted diseases in homosexual men in Western Europe and the United States: Why? Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 19, 311–331.
Golden, M., Brewer, D., Kurth, A., Holmes, K., & Handsfield, H. (2004). Importance of sex partner HIV status in HIV risk assessment among men who have sex with men. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, 36(2), 734–742.
Hatfield, L. A., Ghiselli, M. E., Jacoby, S. M., Cain-Nielsen, A., Kilian, G., McKay, T., et al. (2009). Methods for recruiting men of color who have sex with men in prevention-for-positives interventions. Prevention Science. doi:10.1007/s11121-009-0149-6.
Held, P., Cournoyer, C. R., Held, C. A., & Chilgren, R. A. (1974). Sexual attitude reassessment: A training seminar for health professionals. Minnesota Medicine, 57(11), 925–928.
Johnson, B. T., Carey, M. P., Chaudoir, S. R., & Reid, A. E. (2006). Sexual risk reduction for persons living with HIV: Research synthesis of randomized controlled trials, 1993 to 2004. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 41, 642–650.
Lord, D., & Miranda-Moreno, L. F. (2008). Effects of low sample mean values and small sample size on the estimation of the fixed dispersion parameter of Poisson-gamma models for modeling motor vehicle crashes: A Bayesian perspective. Safety Science, 46, 751–770.
Marin, B. V., Gomez, C. A., Tschann, J. M., & Gregorich, S. E. (1997). Condom use in unmarried Latino men: A test of cultural constructs. Health Psychology, 16(5), 458–467.
Mausbach, B. T., Semple, S. J., Strathdee, S. A., Zians, J., & Patterson, T. L. (2007). Effectiveness of a behavioral intervention for increasing safer sex behaviors in HIV-positive MSM methamphetamine users: Results of the EDGE study. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 87, 249–257.
Miner, M. H., Robinson, B. E., Hoffman, L., Albright, C. L., & Bockting, W. O. (2002). Improving safer sex measures through the inclusion of relationship and partner characteristics. AIDS Care, 4, 827–837.
Morin, S., Shade, S. B., Steward, W. T., Carrico, A. W., Remien, R. H., Rotheram-Borus, M. J., et al. (2008). A behavioral intervention reduces HIV transmission risk by promoting sustained serosorting practices among HIV-infected men who have sex with men. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 49(5), 544–551.
Nimmons, D., & Nimmons, D. (1998). In this together: The limits of prevention based on self-interest and the role of altruism in HIV safety. Journal of Psychology and Human Sexuality, 10, 108–126.
O’Dell, B. L., Rosser, B. R. S., Miner, M. H., & Jacoby, S. M. (2008). HIV prevention altruism and sexual risk behavior in HIV-positive men who have sex with men. AIDS and Behavior, 12(5), 713–720.
Patterson, T. L., Shaw, W. S., & Semple, S. J. (2003). Reducing the sexual risk behaviors of HIV+ individuals: Outcome of a randomized controlled trial. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 25(2), 137–145.
Rawstorne, P., Fogarty, A., Crawford, J., Prestage, G., Grierson, J., Grulich, A., et al. (2007). Differences between HIV-positive gay men who ‘frequently’, ‘sometimes’ or ‘never’ engage in unprotected anal intercourse with serononconcordant casual partners: Positive Health cohort, Australia. AIDS Care, 19(4), 514–522.
Richardson, J. L., Milam, J., McCutchan, A., Stoyanoff, S., Bolan, R., Weiss, J., et al. (2004). Effect of brief safer-sex counseling by medical providers to HIV-1 seropositive patients: A multi-clinic assessment. AIDS, 18, 1179–1186.
Robinson, B. E., Bockting, W. O., Rosser, B. R. S., Rugg, D. L., Miner, M., & Coleman, E. (2002). A sexological approach to HIV prevention: The sexual health model. Health Education Research, 17, 43–57.
Rosser, B. R. S., Bockting, W. O., Rugg, D. L., Robinson, B. B., Ross, M. W., Bauer, G. R., et al. (2002). A randomized controlled intervention trial of a sexual health approach to long-term HIV risk reduction for men who have sex with men: Effects of the intervention on unsafe sexual behavior. AIDS Education and Prevention, 14(Suppl A), 59–61.
Rosser, B. R. S., Coleman, E., & Ohmans, P. (1993). Safer sex maintenance and reduction of unsafe sex among homosexually active men: A comprehensive therapeutic approach. Health Education Research, 8(1), 19–34.
Rosser, B. R. S., Sweryer, S. M., Coleman, E., Robinson, B. E., & Bockting, W. O. (1995). Using sexually explicit material in adult sex education: An eighteen year comparative analysis. Journal of Sex Education and Therapy, 21(2), 117–128.
Stryker, J., Coates, T. J., De Carlo, P., Haynes-Sanstad, K., Shriver, M., & Makadon, H. J. (1995). Prevention of HIV infection: Looking back, looking ahead. Journal of the American Medical Association, 273, 1134–1148.
Varga, C. A., Rosser, B. R. S., & Beardsley, K. (2004). Positive sexual health (PoSH): Sexual health curriculum for HIV+ men who have sex with men: Proceedings of the XV international AIDS conference, Bangkok, Thailand.
Welles, S. L., Baker, C., Miner, M. H., Brennan, D. J., Jacoby, S., & Rosser, B. R. S. (2009). History of childhood sexual abuse and unsafe anal intercourse in a 6-city study of HIV-positive men who have sex with men. American Journal of Public Health, 99(6), 1079–1086.
Wolitski, R. J., Gomez, C. A., Parsons, J. T., & The SUMIT Study Group. (2005). Effects of a peer-led behavioral intervention to reduce HIV transmission and promote serostatus disclosure among HIV-positive gay and bisexual men. AIDS, 19, S99–S109.
Wolitski, R. J., Valdiserri, R. O., Denning, P. H., & Levine, W. C. (2001). Are we headed for a resurgence in the HIV epidemic among men who have sex with men? American Journal of Public Health, 91, 883–888.
Wolpe, J. (1961). The systematic desensitization treatment of neuroses. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 132, 189–203.
Acknowledgments
This study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, Office on AIDS Research, grant #MH064412 and conducted as a community-based participatory research trial. The Positive Connections Team comprises faculty and staff at the University of Minnesota, consultants from AIDS Service Organizations and other universities who provided specialist guidance and direction, and a national leadership team of HIV-positive gay and bisexual men who partnered with this project at every stage from conceptualization to submission of findings. As a multi-site trial, this study was conducted under the oversight of the University of Minnesota Institutional Review Board (IRB), study # 0302S43321, and five other community-based IRBs. We acknowledge with gratitude our community-based partners: Howard Brown Health Center, Chicago, IL; Gay City Health Project, Seattle, WA; Whitman Walker Clinic, Washington, DC; Fenway Community Health Center, Boston, MA; Gay Men’s Health Crisis, New York, NY; AIDS Project Los Angeles and Black AIDS Institute, Los Angeles, CA; and Legacy Community Health Services, Houston, TX. In addition, we gratefully acknowledge the Positive Connections’ team of researchers, community consultants and staff who together made the study possible. Research investigators and consultants who helped design and refine the study included Drs. George Ayala, David Brennan, Alex Carballo-Dieguez, Eli Coleman, Michael Crosby, Keith Horvath, Ken Mayer, John L. Peterson, Beatrice “Bean” Robinson, Michael W. Ross, and Frank Wong. Community Consultants who designed the PoSH intervention and provided input on the target population included Jimmy Alvarez, Cornelius Baker, Kip Beardsley, Keith Bussey†, Jeffrey Kiesling, Nick Metcalf, J. E. Miles, Eduardo Parra, Antony Stately, Tim Vincent, Luis Viquez, Glenn Williams†, and Phill Wilson. Staff from AIDS Service Organizations who conducted the trial, recruited participants and/or led the seminars included Anthony Amado, Dane Ballard, Mary Bahr, Robert Bank, Scott Berlin, David Bucher, Twanna Clark, Leo Colemon, Weston Edwards, Mike Fredrickson, Jay Fournier, Roberta Geidner-Antoniotti, Laura Horwitz, Cory Johnson, Michael Kaplan, Andy Litsky, Edward Liu, Tara McKay, Bruce Maeden, Annie Mejia, Lauren Metoyer, Anthony Morgan, Jason Nelson, Aaron Norton, Benjamin Perkins, Chris Powers, Wendy Reservitz, Nestor Rocha, Eric Roland, Carl Sciortino, Kevin Sitter, Alex Solange, Fred Swanson, and Rodney Van Derwarker. University of Minnesota staff who implemented this project included the project coordinator Scott Jacoby and research assistants Brennan O’Dell, Stephanie Purkat, Tina Dickenson and Anne Cain-Nielsen. This paper is dedicated to two of our consultants, Keith Bussey and Glenn Williams, and at least 13 participants who died of AIDS during this trial.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Consortia
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Simon Rosser, B.R., Hatfield, L.A., Miner, M.H. et al. Effects of a behavioral intervention to reduce serodiscordant unsafe sex among HIV positive men who have sex with men: the Positive Connections randomized controlled trial study. J Behav Med 33, 147–158 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10865-009-9244-1
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10865-009-9244-1