Authors
Allison Earl, Dolores Albarracín, Marta R Durantini, Joann B Gunnoe, Josh Leeper, Justin H Levitt
Publication date
2009/8
Journal
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
Volume
77
Issue
4
Pages
668
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
HIV-prevention intervention effectiveness depends on understanding whether clients with highest need for HIV-prevention counseling accept it. With this objective, a field study with a high-risk community sample from the southeastern United States (N= 350) investigated whether initial knowledge about HIV, motivation to use condoms, condom-use-relevant behavioral skills, and prior condom use correlate with subsequent acceptance of an HIV-prevention counseling session. Ironically, participants with high (vs. low) motivation to use condoms, high (vs. low) condom-use-relevant behavioral skills, and high (vs. low) prior condom use were more likely to accept the HIV-prevention counseling. Moreover, the influence of motivation to use condoms, condom-use-relevant behavioral skills, and prior condom use on acceptance of the counseling was mediated by expectations that the counseling session would be useful …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Earl, D Albarracín, MR Durantini, JB Gunnoe… - Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2009