A systematic review 1 including 24 controlled trials (3 RCTs) with a total of 34 281 participants was abstracted in DARE. Statistically significant findings included improvement in condom use (8/20 studies), reduction in the number of sexual partners (4/12 studies), and reduction in the frequency of unprotected sexual intercourse (5/7 studies). STD prevention interventions did not lead to an increase in the number of adolescents who chose to become sexually active, or in the frequency of sexual intercourse. The authors conclude that effective interventions need five features: theory-based design, provision of STD facts, skills-building exercises, the use of trained facilitators, and a duration of at least 8 hours. Interventions should focus on the provision of condoms, information and demonstration of their use.
Another systematic review 2 including 23 studies (6 experimental, 10 quasi-experimental, 7 national surveys) was abstracted in DARE. According to the authors, effective program characteristics were the following:
A third systematic review 3 abstracted in DARE reviewed the effectiveness of prevention interventions for AIDS in adolescents, including 40 studies (32 RCTs) on subjects with a mean age of 14.3 years (range 10-18 years). Positive intervention impacts included changes in knowledge (88% of studies), changes in attitude (58%), changes in intention to use condoms (60%), condom use (73%), and decrease in the number of sexual partners (64%). Interventions that demonstrated an increase in intention to use a condom were significantly more likely to be theory-based than those that did not show any significant changes in intention (100 versus 0%, p=0.048). Interventions that increased condom use and decreased the number of sexual partners were longer in duration than those that did not improve these outcomes. The meta-analysis (n=4) showed a significant reduction in the proportion of participants who indicated using a condom at their last episode of sexual activity for a 6-month (p=0.005) and 12-month (p=0.015) follow-up. No differences were found in the proportion of participants who always used a condom.
Comment: There is insufficient direct evidence to determine whether any of these educational or clinic programmes actually decreased pregnancy rates, birth rates, or incidence of STD or HIV infections.
Primary/Secondary Keywords