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Effectiveness of an HIV prevention program for women visiting their incarcerated partners
the HOME Project
Grinstead Reznick, O., Comfort, M., McCartney, K., & Neilands, T. B. (2011). Effectiveness of an HIV prevention program for women visiting their incarcerated partners: the HOME Project. AIDS and Behavior, 15(2), 365-375. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-010-9770-4
Having an incarcerated partner presents a unique HIV risk for women, particularly low-income women of color. We developed a population-specific risk reduction intervention for women visiting men in prison that was peer educator-based and included individual and community-level intervention components. Women who were assessed prior to the intervention period had a positive association between the number of unprotected penetrative intercourse (UPI) episodes prior to their partners' incarceration and the number of UPI episodes following partners' release from prison. However, this association was negated among women assessed during the intervention. Intervention participants also were more likely to be tested for HIV, to have partners who got tested, and to talk with their partners about significantly more HIV-related topics. Conducting intervention and evaluation activities with women visiting incarcerated men is feasible and is a useful model for reaching more at-risk women.