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Volume 29, Issue 1: February, 2002

Abstract

*KEEPIN' IT R.E.A.L.!: PROGRAM DESCRIPTION AND RESULTS OF BASELINE ASSESSMENT

Colleen DiIorio, PhD, RN, FAAN, Ken Resnicow, PhD, Stephen Thomas, PhD, Dongqing Terry Wang, MSPH, William N. Dudley, PhD, Deborah F. Van Marter, MPH and Jenny Lipana, MPH, CHES

In this article, the authors present the results of the analysis of the baseline data from Keepin'it R.E.A.L.!, an HIV prevention project developed for mothers and their adolescents. Six hundred twelve mostly male (60.6%) and African American (98.2%) adolescents completed baseline assessments. Eleven percent of the adolescent participants reported initiating sexual intercourse. Adolescent participants expressing higher levels of self-efficacy to resist peer pressure, more favorable outcome expectancies, less communication about sex with their mothers, higher levels of self-concept related to their behavior, lower levels of self-concept related to popularity, and less stress reported fewer types of intimate sexual behaviors. Adolescent participants who reported higher self-efficacy to resist peer pressure to have sex and lower levels of stress were less likely to have initiated sexual intercourse. Selected characteristics of mothers did not contribute to understanding factors associated with intimate sexual behaviors or initiation of sexual intercourse among adolescent participants.

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