Current trends in internet-and cell phone-based HIV prevention and intervention programs
- 7 November 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Current HIV/AIDS Reports
- Vol. 4 (4) , 201-207
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s11904-007-0029-2
Abstract
As the reach of the Internet and cell phones increases, their use as health intervention and prevention tools has been increasingly researched. To identify recent advances in technology-based HIV prevention and intervention research, we conducted a literature search in the Spring of 2007. Only a handful of articles have been published in the last year describing evaluations of technology-based HIV programs. Nonetheless, many programs have recently been funded and are being developed or imminently evaluated. Results to date suggest the Internet and cell phones are feasible technologies to deliver HIV prevention and intervention programs for some target populations. Opportunities for future research are identified, including the development of programs for populations other than men who have sex with men who also are at risk for HIV (eg, adolescents, elderly), the integration of advances from other fields, examination of the potential for using text messaging to affect HIV behavior change, and applications of Internet-based programs in developing countries.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- SEXINFO: A Sexual Health Text Messaging Service for San Francisco YouthAmerican Journal of Public Health, 2008
- A Computer-based Approach to Preventing Pregnancy, STD, and HIV in Rural AdolescentsJournal of Health Communication, 2007
- Internet Use among Ugandan Adolescents: Implications for HIV InterventionPLoS Medicine, 2006
- Conducting Internet-Based HIV/STD Prevention Survey Research: Considerations in Design and EvaluationAIDS and Behavior, 2006
- Meta-analytic Examination of Online Sex-Seeking and Sexual Risk Behavior Among Men Who Have Sex With MenSexually Transmitted Diseases, 2006
- Sexual Negotiation, HIV-Status Disclosure, and Sexual Risk Behavior Among Latino Men Who Use the Internet to Seek Sex with Other MenArchives of Sexual Behavior, 2006
- A Brief Individualized Computer-Delivered Sexual Risk Reduction Intervention Increases HIV/AIDS Preventive BehaviorJournal of Adolescent Health, 2006
- A randomized control trial of Internet-delivered HIV prevention targeting rural MSMHealth Education Research, 2006
- HIV Behavioral Research OnlineJournal of Urban Health, 2006
- Behavioral and Cognitive Barriers to Safer Sex Between Men in Steady Relationships: Implications for Prevention StrategiesAIDS Education and Prevention, 2004