Project Details
Description
DESCRIPTION (adapted from the Abstract): The HIV research addressing
American Indians and HIV/AIDS is scant; a computerized search for
relevant publications locates less than a dozen relevant citations of
empirical work. Although considerable heterogeneity exists among the
over 500 federally-recognized tribes in the United States, overall
epidemiological data point to this group as one at potentially high risk
for HIV because of high rates of alcohol abuse. Moreover, although
reservation-based samples demonstrate decreased levels in problem
drinking, urban samples indicate increased levels, thereby potentially
placing urban Indians at greater risk for HIV exposure. The proposed
project for a FIRST award is a five-year prospective longitudinal panel
study of 300 adult urban American Indian men and women living in the New
York City metropolitan area. The overall aims of the study are to (1)
identify the temporal associations between alcohol use (i.e., quantity,
frequency, and variability) and HIV sexual risk behaviors (i.e.,
frequency of condom use, sexual encounters with high risk groups, and
other high risk behaviors); (2) examine the mediating role of alcohol-
sex expectancy on the alcohol-HIV sexual risk behavior relationship; (3)
identify the temporal relationship between three groups of stressors--
antecedent risk factors in the environment (e.g., family and peer AOD
use), life stressors (e.g., PTSD, trauma), and personal disposition
(psychological distress/psychopathology)--and alcohol use and HIV sexual
risk behaviors; and (4) examine how Indian identity attitudes and
enculturation act as moderating variables to buffer the effect of life
stressors on alcohol use and HIV sexual risk behaviors. Respondents will
be selected randomly from an American Indian membership list at a local
Indian agency after blocking by sex and borough to ensure approximate
representation. Data will be collected in face-to-face structured
interviews at two time points 12 months apart. Focus groups will be run
throughout the study to identify pertinent cultural themes and to elicit
feedback regarding the cultural equivalence of the measures. This study
will be one of the first examining the relationship between alcohol and
HIV sexual risk behaviors among urban American Indians. Additionally,
this study will provide information as to how identity should be
incorporated into the development of primary, secondary, and tertiary
alcohol abuse and HIV risk prevention interventions for this population.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 2/1/99 → 1/31/01 |
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Infectious Diseases
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