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Critique
Center for AIDS Intervention Research (CAIR)
The following assessment of program strengths and weaknesses
has been abstracted from reviews by the Task Force on Program Selection
of The Health Project. Where weaknesses are postulated, it must be taken
into account that the review Task Force is very critical, that no programs
are perfect, that the Award Winning programs have been selected from over
300 candidate programs and represent the very best, that the materials
reviewed may have been incomplete, that suggested deficiencies may have
resulted from incomplete understanding of the program by the reviewers
or that any problems may have been corrected since the time of review.
Evaluation: The "Center for Aids Intervention
Research (CAIR)" of the Medical College of Wisconsin has tackled the frightful
problem of AIDS in impoverished, inner-city minority women under 45 with
a small-group HIV prevention intervention model and systematic follow-up
that includes HIV risk education, sexual decision making, assertiveness
in sexual situations and risk reduction skills building. The program has
demonstrated extraordinary cost effectiveness compared with other life-saving
interventions.
Women in the HIV Prevention Program improved risk knowledge
and risk reduction skills, reduced rates of unprotected sex by 20 percent,
and increased their use of barrier protection from 26 percent to 56 percent
of intercourse occasions. Cost-effectiveness analysis showed program cost
to be $269 per client and the base cost-utility ratio was $2024 per discounted
QALY saved. The program was funded by the National Institutes of Mental
Health. There was random assignment to the educational program; a peer-reviewed
study is in press for the American Journal of Public Health, an excellent
journal. There is potential for large population and cost-savings and reviewers
would like to see it rolled out to more groups. Program goals are clearly
delineated. Evaluation included a comparison group. It is a relatively
low cost, high reward program. Reviewers liked the concept of the program
very much. There are two articles in the journal of the Public Health Association;
one on effectiveness and one on cost-effectiveness.
Single focus. Relatively small study. The program is not
likely to do much unless it can be sustained and expanded. Five sessions
of prevention over two months may be insufficient to produce lasting change.
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