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Featured researches published by Jill G. Joseph.


Health Education & Behavior | 1986

Psychosocial Predictors of Reported Behavior Change in Homosexual Men at Risk for AIDS

Carol-Ann Emmons; Jill G. Joseph; Ronald C. Kessler; Camille B. Wortman; Susanne Montgomery; David G. Ostrow

Carol-Ann Emmons, Jill G. Joseph, Ronald C. Kessler, Camille B. Wortman, Susanne B. Montgomery, and David G. Ostrow are with the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan. This work was supported by research funding from the National Institute of Mental Health (2 R01 MH39346-02A1) and the University of Michigan. The authors are grateful to Anita DeLongis for comments made on an earlier draft. Please refer questions, comments, and requests for reprints to Jill G. Joseph, PhD, Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, 109 Observatory Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. This article investigates the relationship between psychosocial factors and gay men’s attempts to change their sexual behavior in response to the threat of AIDS. Questionnaire data collected from 909 homosexual men at risk of AIDS were used to quantify potential psychosocial predictors of health behavior. Multiple logistic regression analyses were used to estimate the relationship between these predictor variables and five


Social Science & Medicine | 1993

Social relationships of men at risk for AIDS

Kerth O'Brien; Camille B. Wortman; Ronald C. Kessler; Jill G. Joseph

Survey data collected in 1984-85 from a community sample of 637 gay and bisexual men were used to determine the features of social relationships that were most conductive to changes in both psychological health and AIDS-related sexual risk behavior. Multiple regression analyses showed that both the perceived availability of social support and the absence of conflicts in the social network were related to improve psychological health. At the same time, the subjective experience of integration into social networks was associated with increased psychological distress, and validation (the experience of being accepted by others) was related to a higher level of risk activity. These findings are discussed in terms of the social relationships among community members that share a common stressor--in this case the shared problem of being at risk for AIDS.


Journal of Substance Abuse | 1993

Recreational drugs and sexual behavior in the Chicago MACS/CCS cohort of homosexually active men

David G. Ostrow; Eugenio D. Beltran; Jill G. Joseph; Wayne Difranceisco; Jerry Wesch; Joan S. Chmiel

Since initial reports emerged of an association between recreational drug use and high-risk sexual behaviors in gay men, there has been interest in studying this relationship for its relevance to behavioral interventions. Reported here are the longitudinal patterns of alcohol and recreational drug use in the Chicago Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS)/Coping and Change Study (CCS) of gay men. A pattern of decreasing drug use over 6 years was observed that paralleled a decline in high-risk sexual behavior (i.e., unprotected anal intercourse). In contrast, alcohol consumption tended to be more stable over time, and to show no relationship to sexual behavior change. Men who combined volatile nitrite (popper) use with other recreational drugs were at highest risk both behaviorally and in terms of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV) seroconversion throughout the study. Popper use also was associated independently with lapse from safer sexual behaviors (failure to use a condom during receptive anal sex). Use of other recreational substances showed no relationship to sexual behavior change patterns, and stopping popper use was unrelated to improvement in safer sexual behavior. When popper use and lapse from safer sex were reanalyzed, controlling for primary relationship status, popper use was associated with failure to use condoms during receptive anal sex among nonmonogamous men only. These findings suggest an association between popper use and high-risk sexual behavior among members of the Chicago MACS/CCS cohort that has relevance to HIV prevention intervention efforts.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1993

A longitudinal study of psychological distress in a cohort of gay men. Effects of social support and coping strategies.

Lackner Jb; Jill G. Joseph; David G. Ostrow; Ronald C. Kessler; Suzann Eshleman; Camille B. Wortman; O'Brien K; Phair Jp; J. Chmiel

This study presents analyses on questionnaire data collected from a panel of 520 gay men at risk for acquired immune deficiency syndrome, enrolled in the Coping and Change Study (1985—1987). The data were assessed to determine the association of social support and coping styles with subsequent depression and global distress and to investigate whether these predictors of mental health are stable or transient over time. Three different measures of the subjective, qualitative nature of social support were significantly associated with subsequent mental health. Those who reported a subjective sense of isolation experienced significantly more adverse mental health 6 months later at all three measurement periods. Scattered effects were found for perceived social conflict and perceived social support from others. These results indicate that certain types of social support appear to influence mental health in this cohort and, furthermore, that some associations are transient and others more stable over time.


AIDS | 1991

Relapse in sexual behavior among homosexual men: a 2-year follow-up from the Chicago MACS/CCS.

Adib Sm; Jill G. Joseph; David G. Ostrow; Margalit Tal; Stanley A. Schwartz

Serial biannual cross-sectional assessments of HIV sexual risk indicated a consistent increase in safer sexual practices among homosexual men participating in the Chicago-Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS)/Coping and Change Study (CCS) in 1986-1988. Safer sexual practices were achieved by avoidance of anal sex and less often by consistent use of condoms. Longitudinal patterns of variability in individual behavior were also assessed. After 1 year of follow-up, 53% of the participants maintained safer practices in receptive anal sex, 6% maintained unsafe practices, while 31% relapsed at least once. After 2 years, 45% maintained safer practices, 3% maintained unsafe practices and 47% relapsed at least once. Similar trends were observed in insertive anal sex.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1990

Psychological functioning in a cohort of gay men at risk for AIDS. A three-year descriptive study

Jill G. Joseph; Susan M. Caumartin; Margalit Tal; John P. Kirscht; Ronald C. Kessler; David G. Ostrow; Camille B. Wortman

This study describes the mental health of a large cohort of gay men participating in the Chicago Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study/Coping and Change Study. Six biannual questionnaires were self-administered between 1984 and 1988. General mental health was determined by the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL). An abbreviated version of the Center for Epidemiologic Study Depression Scale (CESD-5) and an adapted Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS) question also measured depression. Suicidal ideation was assessed by one question in the HSCL. AIDS-specific distress was determined by three subscales specifically developed for this study While mean HSCL and CESD-5 scores were stable during the observational period, AIDSspecific distress increased over time. The HSCL scores for the cohort were somewhat elevated above general population norms but considerably below psychiatric outpatient norms. Fewer than 12% of the men reported elevated HSCL or CESD-5 scores three or more times. A self-reported episode of depression of two weeks or more, measured by the DIS screening question, was experienced by 40.1% of the sample. Suicidal ideation was reported on three or more visits by 18.8% of the men The younger members of this cohort exhibit greater general and AIDS-specific distress. Income was inversely associated with general distress. HIV-seropositive participants had generally higher AIDS-specific distress scores than those who were seronegative, but their scores were equivalent on the HSCL and CESD-5


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1993

The effects of social support on Hopkins Symptom Checklist-assessed depression and distress in a cohort of human immunodeficiency virus-positive and -negative gay men: A longitudinal study at six time points

Johanna B. Lackner; Jill G. Joseph; David G. Ostrow; Suzann Eshleman

Questionnaire data were collected from a panel of 342 gay men at risk for acquired immune deficiency syndrome enrolled in the Coping and Change Study between 1985 and 1987, and 1988 and 1990. Data were obtained across a period of 5 years in six serial wave pairs to determine the relationship of social support to Hopkins Symptom Checklist-assessed subsequent depression and general distress and to investigate whether the trends observed were stable or transient over time. Both objective and subjective components of social support demonstrated dramatic within-person stability over time (r=.47 to .86). A measure of subjective social support was modestly but significantly associated with lower depression at four of the six time periods and a lower level of general distress at one time period. Before appropriately controlling for current depression, subjective social support appeared to account for up to a third of the variance in future depression; after such controls were included in the regression equation, it became apparent that the independent contribution of support only ranged from 4% to 6% across the study period. This emphasizes the importance of including current mental health in longitudinal analyses. The respondents social participation and involvement with others did not affect either depression or general distress at any time during the study period. These results indicate that while social participation may have no effect, subjective social support appears to influence often mental health in this cohort. Furthermore, human immunodeficiency virus seropositive men may at times benefit from such support.


Social Science & Medicine | 1988

Effects of HIV infection, perceived health and clinical status on a cohort at risk for aids

Ronald C. Kessler; Kerth O'Brien; Jill G. Joseph; David G. Ostrow; John P. Phair; Joan S. Chmiel; Camille B. Wortman; Carol Ann Emmons

Data from a general population sample of 621 healthy homosexual men are used to evaluate the social and emotional effects of HIV antibody status, clinical signs detected by medical examination, and subjectively perceived symptoms. Participants are unaware of their serologic status at the time of data collection, thus allowing the effects of the virus to be separated from reactions to the knowledge of serologic status. The data show that seropositivity for HIV is not associated with elevated levels of social or emotional impairment. Clinical signs lead to impairment in baseline data, but these effects do not persist at a second wave. This weakening suggests that the effects are mediated by psychological pathways rather than biologic ones. This suspicion is confirmed in further analyses, which show that the effects of clinical signs are mediated by subjectively perceived symptoms. These results show that neither social nor emotional impairment is likely to be a prodromal sign of HIV infection in otherwise healthy homosexual men. The substantial levels of distress found among these men is more directly influenced by psychological determinants than biologic ones. This suggests that physicians should be aware of the psychological toll imposed on gay men who develop health problems in the current atmosphere of uncertainty regarding risk of AIDS.


Journal of Community Health | 1991

GAY IDENTITY AND RISKY SEXUAL BEHAVIOR RELATED TO THE AIDS THREAT

K. Michael Joseph; S. Maurice Adib; Jill G. Joseph; Margalit Tal

This paper explores the relationship between risky sexual behavior and issues of gay identity in homosexual men. We identify three main conceptual categories important to gay identity: sexual identity, gay social interaction, and identity development milestones. Each of these categories are analyzed as to their predictive effect on risky sexual behavior related to the threat of HIV, at six-month and eighteen-month intervals. The results suggest that successful integration into a gay network plays a role in reducing risky sexual behavior among homosexual men, regardless of the chronological timing of personal events marking a gay mans “coming out” history.


Archive | 1990

Educational Strategies for Prevention of Sexual Transmission of HIV

Robb W. Johnson; David G. Ostrow; Jill G. Joseph

During the past few years, an impressive array of educational materials and programs have been produced with the aim of preventing further spread of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. However, due to the immediacy and gravity of the epidemic threat, many educational interventions have been initiated without adequate attention to their likely specific impact and without proper means of evaluating their effectiveness. This type of response may be justified by legitimate immediate concern with human life and suffering. However, it is imperative that preventive educational programs be carefully assessed for their actual impact on HIV transmission, as well as more proximate effects on knowledge, attitudes, or specific behavior.

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Adib Sm

University of Michigan

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