In this study the researchers will develop and evaluate an HIV-prevention plus educational planning program for abused and neglected youths in foster care, which will be implemented through the Independent Living Program (ILP), a skills-building program that provides life skills to youths before they are discharged from state custody. Previous research indicates that educational parameters such as relationships with teachers, skipping school, grades, and educational aspirations are predictive of HIV-risk knowledge, attitudes, behavioral intentions, and behaviors. Although brief cognitive-behavioral interventions appear to be promising in the short term, long-term follow-up indicates that outcomes achieved do not last in this high risk adolescent population. An integral part of HIV-prevention with abused and neglected youth should involve providing youths with opportunities, skills, and hope for their futures. This can be achieved by implementing a life skills program that integrates HIV-prevention with a life-options building intervention that emphasizes educational aspirations and planning. An experimental design will be used and 430 youths will be assigned randomly either to an HIV-Prevention Plus Life Options condition or to the usual care condition. Both conditions will be delivered over an 8-month intervention phase. Evaluation of the program will be performed using data assessed during pre-, post-, and 9-month follow-up interviews. The primary outcome will be HIV-risk behaviors. Secondary outcomes include: knowledge and attitudes about HIV prevention, self-efficacy, intentions to engage in HIV-risk behaviors, future aspirations and beliefs about savings, and educational plans. A major strength of this study is that the program will be delivered through the ILP, a well-established, state-administered program in the community. ILP will provide: (1) access to high-risk abused and neglected youths; (2) the involvement of committed staff delivering a program whose philosophy is consistent with that of the study; and (3) the potential to disseminate the curriculum developed for the proposed study to ILP programs both statewide (in the seven regions of Missouri's Department of Social Services) and nationwide.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01HD035445-03S1
Application #
6298387
Study Section
AIDS and Related Research Study Section 6 (ARRF)
Program Officer
Newcomer, Susan
Project Start
1998-01-01
Project End
2001-12-31
Budget Start
2000-01-01
Budget End
2000-12-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$31,819
Indirect Cost
Name
Washington University
Department
Type
Schools of Social Work
DUNS #
062761671
City
Saint Louis
State
MO
Country
United States
Zip Code
63130
Auslander, Wendy F; Thompson Jr, Ronald G; Gerke, Donald R (2014) The Moderating Effect of Marijuana Use on the Relationship between Delinquent Behavior and HIV Risk among Adolescents in Foster Care. J HIV AIDS Soc Serv 13:179-197
Thompson Jr, Ronald G; Auslander, Wendy F (2007) Risk factors for alcohol and marijuana use among adolescents in foster care. J Subst Abuse Treat 32:61-9
Edmond, Tonya; Auslander, Wendy; Elze, Diane et al. (2006) Signs of resilience in sexually abused adolescent girls in the foster care system. J Child Sex Abus 15:1-28
McMillen, Curtis; Auslander, Wendy; Elze, Diane et al. (2003) Educational experiences and aspirations of older youth in foster care. Child Welfare 82:475-95
Edmond, Tonya; Auslander, Wendy; Elze, Diane E et al. (2002) Differences between sexually abused and non-sexually abused adolescent girls in foster care. J Child Sex Abus 11:73-99
Elze, D E; Auslander, W; McMillen, C et al. (2001) Untangling the impact of sexual abuse on HIV risk behaviors among youths in foster care. AIDS Educ Prev 13:377-89