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. 2014 Apr;26(2):144-57.
doi: 10.1521/aeap.2014.26.2.144.

The staying safe intervention: training people who inject drugs in strategies to avoid injection-related HCV and HIV infection

The staying safe intervention: training people who inject drugs in strategies to avoid injection-related HCV and HIV infection

Pedro Mateu-Gelabert et al. AIDS Educ Prev. 2014 Apr.

Abstract

This pilot study explores the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of the Staying Safe Intervention, an innovative, strengths-based program to facilitate prevention of infection with the human immunodeficiency virus and with the hepatitis C virus among people who inject drugs (PWID). The authors explored changes in the intervention's two primary endpoints: (a) frequency and amount of drug intake, and (b) frequency of risky injection practices. We also explored changes in hypothesized mediators of intervention efficacy: planning skills, motivation/self-efficacy to inject safely, skills to avoid PWID-associated stigma, social support, drug-related withdrawal symptoms, and injection network size and risk norms. A 1-week, five-session intervention (10 hours total) was evaluated using a pre- versus 3-month posttest design. Fifty-one participants completed pre- and posttest assessments. Participants reported significant reductions in drug intake and injection-related risk behavior. Participants also reported significant increases in planning skills, motivation/self-efficacy, and stigma management strategies, while reducing their exposure to drug withdrawal episodes and risky injection networks.

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FIGURE 1
Staying Safe Intervention Model and Targeted Outcomes.

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