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Addressing the Influence of Hegemonic Masculinity on Veterans Through Brief Dynamic Interpersonal Therapy

Chen, Cory K.; Dognin, Joanna S.
ISI:000413340400007
ISSN: 1524-9220
CID: 4431962

The Effect of Military Sexual Trauma on Colorectal Cancer Screening Rates in Veterans [Meeting Abstract]

Papademetriou, Marianna; Kaplan, Alyson; Tenner, Craig; Wang, Binhuan; Poles, Michael A; Dognin, Joanna
ISI:000395764600271
ISSN: 1572-0241
CID: 2492412

HIV infection and AIDS-associated neoplasms

Chapter by: Dognin, Joanna S; Selwyn, Peter A
in: Psycho-oncology by Holland, Jimmie C; Breitbart, William S; Butow, Phyllis N; Jacobsen, Paul B; Loscalzo, Matthew J; McCorkle, Ruth [Eds]
New York, NY : Oxford University Press; US, 2015
pp. 155-161
ISBN: 978-0-19-936331-5
CID: 1645402

Moving from theory to research to practice. Implementing an effective dyadic intervention to improve antiretroviral adherence for clinic patients

Remien, Robert H; Stirratt, Michael J; Dognin, Joanna; Day, Emily; El-Bassel, Nabila; Warne, Patricia
There is a dearth of evidence on the relative efficacy of intervention modalities to improve and maintain patient adherence to antiretroviral medications. Although empiric findings from research on HIV/AIDS, other diseases, and chronic medical conditions consistently demonstrate that social support plays an important role in facilitating adherence, few HIV/AIDS interventions have directly targeted this factor. Ewart's social action theory emphasizes the role of social relationships in behavior change and provides a comprehensive and useful guide to the development of interventions for adherence. We describe the development, content, and testing of SMART Couples, an effective antiretroviral adherence intervention that is grounded in social action theory and designed to enhance social support for ART adherence. Finally, we discuss some of the challenges of translating findings from the randomized clinical trial of this intervention into clinical practice and offer recommendations for integration of lessons learned into ongoing clinical care.
PMID: 17133206
ISSN: 1525-4135
CID: 162775

Couple-focused support to improve HIV medication adherence: a randomized controlled trial

Remien, Robert H; Stirratt, Michael J; Dolezal, Curtis; Dognin, Joanna S; Wagner, Glenn J; Carballo-Dieguez, Alex; El-Bassel, Nabila; Jung, Tiffany M
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of a couple-based intervention to improve medication-taking behavior in a clinic population with demonstrated adherence problems. DESIGN: A randomized controlled trial (SMART Couples Study) conducted between August 2000 and January 2004. SETTING: Two HIV/AIDS outpatient clinics in New York City. PARTICIPANTS: Heterosexual and homosexual HIV-serodiscordant couples (n = 215) in which the HIV-seropositive partner had < 80% adherence at baseline. The sample was predominantly lower-income racial/ethnic minorities. INTERVENTION: Participants were randomly assigned to a four-session couple-focused adherence intervention or usual care. The intervention consisted of education about treatment and adherence, identifying adherence barriers, developing communication and problem-solving strategies, optimizing partner support, and building confidence for optimal adherence. OUTCOME MEASURES: Medication adherence at week 8 (2 weeks after the intervention) compared with baseline, assessed with a Medication Event Monitoring System cap. RESULTS: Intervention participants showed higher mean medication adherence at post-intervention when compared with controls whether adherence was defined as proportion of prescribed doses taken (76% versus 60%) or doses taken within specified time parameters (58% versus 35%). Also, participants in the intervention arm were significantly more likely to achieve high levels of adherence (> 80%, > 90%, or > 95%) when compared with controls. However, in most cases, effects diminished with time, as seen at follow-up at 3 and 6 months. CONCLUSION: The SMART Couples program significantly improved medication adherence over usual care, although the level of improved adherence, for many participants, was still suboptimal and the effect was attenuated over time.
PMID: 15867495
ISSN: 0269-9370
CID: 162776