2006
DOI: 10.1007/s10508-006-9077-8
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Single-Session Motivational Enhancement Counseling to Support Change Toward Reduction of HIV Transmission by HIV Positive Persons

Abstract: Given the enormous successes in treating HIV disease with antiretroviral therapies, there is a burgeoning population of healthy, sexually active HIV+ men and women. Because HIV prevention counseling has focused traditionally on persons at risk of becoming infected, there is an urgent mandate to explore ways to engage HIV+ persons in transmission risk reduction counseling. Using two case examples, this article presents an overview of motivational interviewing in a single counseling session as a promising treatm… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…34 HIV/STI prevention within jail systems could test brief, even single-session, risk reduction interventions, which have been shown effective in various populations. [50][51][52] Additionally, HIV prevention studies could recruit participants from jail settings and implement prevention interventions upon community reentry-a highrisk window of opportunity for intervention. 53,54 Providing HIV/STI prevention services to non-incarcerated arrestees could be accomplished in community settings such as probation and alternative to incarceration programs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…34 HIV/STI prevention within jail systems could test brief, even single-session, risk reduction interventions, which have been shown effective in various populations. [50][51][52] Additionally, HIV prevention studies could recruit participants from jail settings and implement prevention interventions upon community reentry-a highrisk window of opportunity for intervention. 53,54 Providing HIV/STI prevention services to non-incarcerated arrestees could be accomplished in community settings such as probation and alternative to incarceration programs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fisher et al (2006) and Richardson et al (2004) used quasiexperimental designs; Zuniga et al (2007) and Gardner et al (2008) used pre-and postnonexperimental designs;and Rutledge (2007) presented a qualitative clinical case report with two cases. Kalichman et al (2007) presented outcome data from a follow-up study that evaluated a variation to the Healthy Relationships Intervention Project previously reported (Kalichman, Rompa, & Cage, 2005).…”
Section: Intervention Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…MI counseling has been successful in changing many health behaviors including substance use, fruit and vegetable intake, and physical activity [9-12]. More recently MI has been used with HIV positive persons to address substance use, [13, 14] medication adherence, [13, 15, 16] and safer sex preventive behaviors [14, 17-21]. In most prior studies it has been conducted in one-to-one counseling sessions, however, we adapted this method for the group format drawing from the experience of Ingersoll and Wagner [22] who used MI for substance abuse treatment groups and Morrison-Beedy and colleagues [23] who used motivational enhancement for safer sex with adolescents.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%