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Dive into the research topics where Katharine E. Stewart is active.

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Featured researches published by Katharine E. Stewart.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2005

Stress, social support and housing are related to health status among HIV-positive persons in the deep south of the United States.

Katharine E. Stewart; Cianfrini Lr; Jada F. Walker

Self-report health status measures are consistently associated with medical outcomes and are cost-effective. Studies using such measures find that those who live in rural areas or have limited access to support experience poorer health status and poorer outcomes. A survey addressing these issues was administered to 401 HIV-positive persons throughout Alabama. Hierarchical regression models examined the relation of housing stability, stress, substance use and other variables to physical (PCS) and mental (MCS) health status. The sample was 34% female and 66% African-American. Most were receiving antiretroviral medications, and nearly 20% were in unstable housing. Age showed a significant negative relationship to health status. CD4 cell count (p<0.01) was positively associated with PCS; perceived general stress (p<0.02) and housing stability (p<0.04) were negatively associated. The model accounted for 14% of the variance in PCS (p<0.001). For MCS, general stress (p<0.001) was negatively associated and substance use tended towards a negative association (p<0.075). Social support (p<0.02) was positively associated with MCS. The model accounted for nearly 31% of the MCS variance (p<0.001). Health status among HIV-positive persons may be improved by assessing and addressing social issues such as social isolation, life stressors and housing.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2009

MOMS: formative evaluation and subsequent intervention for mothers living with HIV.

Susan L. Davies; Trudi Venters Horton; Angela Williams; Michelle Y. Martin; Katharine E. Stewart

Abstract The Making Our Mothers Stronger (MOMS) Project is a randomized controlled behavioral trial, comparing a stress-reduction and social support intervention (Healthy MOMS) to a parenting skills intervention (Parenting Skills for MOMS) for mothers living with HIV. Outcomes include maternal mental and physical health, parenting behaviors, and childrens behavior. To ensure that these interventions were tailored to the needs of HIV + mothers, extensive formative work was conducted with members of the intended audience and relevant service providers. Findings from focus groups and semi-structured interviews highlighted the need for Healthy MOMS to: (1) include appropriate approaches to group discussion and problem solving; (2) address the stressors of being both a parent and a woman living with HIV; and (3) enhance social support. Six weekly group sessions focused on topics including coping with stress and anxiety; enhancing nutrition, exercise, and sexual health; improving medical adherence; improving communication with health care providers; and communicating health needs to family, friends, and co-workers. Initial anecdotal responses from participants suggest that the Healthy MOMS intervention addresses several salient issues for the growing population of HIV + mothers who can benefit from long-term support in adapting to this chronic disease.


Aids Patient Care and Stds | 2013

Utility of an Interactive Voice Response System to Assess Antiretroviral Pharmacotherapy Adherence Among Substance Users Living with HIV/AIDS in the Rural South

Jalie A. Tucker; Cathy A. Simpson; Jin Huang; David L. Roth; Katharine E. Stewart

Promoting HIV medication adherence is basic to HIV/AIDS clinical care and reducing transmission risk and requires sound assessment of adherence and risk behaviors such as substance use that may interfere with adherence. The present study evaluated the utility of a telephone-based Interactive Voice Response self-monitoring (IVR SM) system to assess prospectively daily HIV medication adherence and its correlates among rural substance users living with HIV/AIDS. Community-dwelling patients (27 men, 17 women) recruited from a non-profit HIV medical clinic in rural Alabama reported daily medication adherence, substance use, and sexual practices for up to 10 weeks. Daily IVR reports of adherence were compared with short-term IVR-based recall reports over 4- and 7-day intervals. Daily IVR reports were positively correlated with both recall measures over matched intervals. However, 7-day recall yielded higher adherence claims compared to the more contemporaneous daily IVR and 4-day recall measures suggestive of a social desirability bias over the longer reporting period. Nearly one-third of participants (32%) reported adherence rates below the optimal rate of 95% (range=0-100%). Higher IVR-reported daily medication adherence was associated with lower baseline substance use, shorter duration of HIV/AIDS medical care, and higher IVR utilization. IVR SM appears to be a useful telehealth tool for monitoring medication adherence and identifying patients with suboptimal adherence between clinic visits and can help address geographic barriers to care among disadvantaged, rural adults living with HIV/AIDS.


Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care | 2009

Stages of Change, Decisional Balance, and Self-Efficacy in Condom Use Among Rural African-American Stimulant Users

Donna L. Gullette; Patricia B. Wright; Brenda M. Booth; Zachary L. Feldman; Katharine E. Stewart

&NA; This pilot study (a) examined the stages of change (SOC) for condom use with primary and casual partners among rural heterosexual African American stimulant users, (b) identified gender differences in variables associated with SOC, and (c) assessed the association of SOC with decisional balance and self‐efficacy. A total of 72 participants completed the study. SOC with a primary partner were much lower than with a casual partner, indicating more consistent condom use with casual partners. Significant gender differences existed in decisional balance for condom use for both primary (p = .02) and casual partners (p =.03), with women having higher decisional balance scores than men. Women also reported higher self‐efficacy scores for condom use with casual partners than men. In regression models, age, decisional balance, and self‐efficacy were significantly associated with SOC for condom use with a primary partner; however, only self‐efficacy was significantly associated with SOC with casual partners. The results provide support for the development of interventions that promote the advantages of and increase self‐efficacy for condom use.


Journal of Rural Health | 2015

Rural/urban residence, access, and perceived need for treatment among African American cocaine users.

Tyrone F. Borders; Brenda M. Booth; Katharine E. Stewart; Ann M. Cheney; Geoffrey M. Curran

OBJECTIVE To examine how rural/urban residence, perceived access, and other factors impede or facilitate perceived need for drug use treatment, a concept closely linked to treatment utilization. STUDY DESIGN Two hundred rural and 200 urban African American cocaine users who were not receiving treatment were recruited via Respondent-Driven Sampling and completed a structured in-person interview. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were conducted to test the associations between perceived need and rural/urban residence, perceived access, and other predisposing (eg, demographics), enabling (eg, insurance), and health factors (eg, psychiatric distress). PRINCIPAL FINDINGS In bivariate analyses, rural relative to urban cocaine users reported lower perceived treatment need (37% vs 48%), availability, affordability, overall ease of access, and effectiveness, as well as lower perceived acceptability of residential, outpatient, self-help, and hospital-based services. In multivariate analyses, there was a significant interaction between rural/urban residence and the acceptability of religious counseling. At the highest level of acceptability, rural users had lower odds of perceived need (OR = 0.21); at the lowest level, rural users had higher odds of perceived need (OR = 3.97) than urban users. Among rural users, the acceptability of religious counseling was negatively associated with perceived need (OR = 0.65). Ease of access was negatively associated (OR = 0.71) whereas local treatment effectiveness (OR = 1.47) and the acceptability of hospital-based treatment (OR = 1.29) were positively associated with perceived need among all users. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest rural/urban disparities in perceived need and access to drug use treatment. Among rural and urban cocaine users, improving perceptions of treatment effectiveness and expanding hospital-based services could promote treatment seeking.


Addictive Behaviors | 2014

Beliefs and attitudes regarding drug treatment: Application of the Theory of Planned Behavior in African-American cocaine users

Brenda M. Booth; Katharine E. Stewart; Geoffrey M. Curran; Ann M. Cheney; Tyrone F. Borders

BACKGROUND The Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) can provide insights into perceived need for cocaine treatment among African American cocaine users. METHODS A cross-sectional community sample of 400 (50% rural) not-in-treatment African-American cocaine users was identified through respondent-driven sampling in one urban and two rural counties in Arkansas. Measures included self-reports of attitudes and beliefs about cocaine treatment, perceived need and perceived effectiveness of treatment, and positive and negative cocaine expectancies. Normative beliefs were measured by perceived stigma and consequences of stigma regarding drug use and drug treatment. Perceived control was measured by readiness for treatment, prior drug treatment, and perceived ability to cut down on cocaine use without treatment. FINDINGS Multiple regression analysis found that older age (standardized regression coefficient β=0.15, P<0.001), rural residence (β=-0.09, P=0.025), effectiveness of treatment (β=0.39, P<0.001), negative cocaine expectancies (β=0.138, P=0.003), experiences of rejection (β=0.18, P<0.001), need for secrecy (β=0.12, P=0.002), and readiness for treatment (β=0.15, P<0.001) were independently associated with perceived need for cocaine treatment. CONCLUSIONS TPB is a relevant model for understanding perceived need for treatment among African-American cocaine users. Research has shown perceived need to be a major correlate of treatment participation. Study results should be applicable for designing interventions to encourage treatment participation.


Journal of Drug Issues | 2014

The Religious and Spiritual Dimensions of Cutting Down and Stopping Cocaine Use A Qualitative Exploration Among African Americans in the South

Ann M. Cheney; Geoffrey M. Curran; Brenda M. Booth; Steve Sullivan; Katharine E. Stewart; Tyrone F. Borders

This study qualitatively examines the religious and spiritual dimensions of cutting down and stopping cocaine use among African Americans in rural and urban areas of Arkansas. The analyses compare and contrast the narrative data of 28 current cocaine users living in communities where the Black church plays a fundamental role in the social and cultural lives of many African Americans, highlighting the ways that participants used religious symbols, idiomatic expression, and Biblical scriptures to interpret and make sense of their substance-use experiences. Participants drew on diverse religious and spiritual beliefs and practices, including participation in organized religion, reliance on a personal relationship with God, and God’s will to cut down and stop cocaine use. Our findings suggest that culturally sensitive interventions addressing the influence of religion and spirituality in substance use are needed to reduce cocaine use and promote recovery in this at-risk, minority population.


Substance Use & Misuse | 2012

The “Translators”: Engaging Former Drug Users as Key Research Staff to Design and Implement a Risk Reduction Program for Rural Cocaine Users

Katharine E. Stewart; Patricia B. Wright; Desi Sims; Kathy Russell Tyner; Brooke E. E. Montgomery

This manuscript describes lessons learned in the development and implementation of a clinical behavioral trial to reduce sexual risk among African-American cocaine users in rural Arkansas, from the perspectives of a multidisciplinary investigative team and community staff members with a history as local drug users who served as “translators.” Recommendations for investigators doing community-based research with active substance users are provided in the following domains: (a) engaging the community during formative research, (b) establishing bidirectional trust, (c) ensuring community voices are heard, and (d) managing conflict. The “translators” role is critical to the success of such projects.


Journal of Rural Health | 2013

A Qualitative Analysis of Provider Barriers and Solutions to HIV Testing for Substance Users in a Small, Largely Rural Southern State

Patricia B. Wright; Geoffrey M. Curran; Katharine E. Stewart; Brenda M. Booth

PURPOSE Integrating HIV testing programs into substance use treatment is a promising avenue to help increase access to HIV testing for rural drug users. Yet few outpatient substance abuse treatment facilities in the United States provide HIV testing. The purpose of this study was to identify barriers to incorporating HIV testing with substance use treatment from the perspectives of treatment and testing providers in Arkansas. METHODS We used purposive sampling from state directories to recruit providers at state, organization, and individual levels to participate in this exploratory study. Using an interview guide, the first and second authors conducted semistructured individual interviews in each providers office or by telephone. All interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim, and entered into ATLAS.ti software (ATLAS.ti Scientific Software Development GmbH, Berlin, Germany). We used constant comparison and content analysis techniques to identify codes, categories, and primary patterns in the data. FINDINGS The sample consisted of 28 providers throughout the state, 18 from the substance use system and 10 from the public/ community health system. We identified 7 categories of barriers: environmental constraints, policy constraints, funding constraints, organizational structure, limited inter- and intra-agency communication, burden of responsibility, and client fragility. CONCLUSIONS This study presents the practice-based realities of barriers to integrating HIV testing with substance use treatment in a small, largely rural state. Some system and/or organization leaders were either unaware of or not actively pursuing external funds available to them specifically for engaging substance users in HIV testing. However, funding does not address the system-level need for coordination of resources and services at the state level.


American Journal on Addictions | 2013

Risky sex in rural America: Longitudinal changes in a community‐based cohort of methamphetamine and cocaine users

Tyrone F. Borders; Katharine E. Stewart; Patricia B. Wright; Carl G. Leukefeld; Russel S. Falck; Robert G. Carlson; Brenda M. Booth

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES This study examined the longitudinal associations between stimulant use and sexual behaviors. METHODS Data are from a 3-year community-based study of 710 rural stimulant users. Past 30-day crack cocaine, powder cocaine, and methamphetamine use and sexual behaviors (any sex, inconsistent condom use, and multiple sexual partners) were assessed through in-person interviews every 6 months. RESULTS GEE analyses revealed that the odds of having sex remained steady over time, with crack cocaine and methamphetamine use positively associated with having sex. The odds of multiple sexual partners declined, but the odds of inconsistent condom use remained steady over time. Crack cocaine use was positively associated with multiple sexual partners, whereas powder cocaine use was negatively associated with inconsistent condom use. CONCLUSIONS AND SCIENTIFIC SIGNIFICANCE Many rural stimulant users could potentially benefit from safe sex educational programs. Such efforts could reduce the incidence of HIV and other STIs in rural America.

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Brenda M. Booth

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Patricia B. Wright

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Brooke E. E. Montgomery

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Geoffrey M. Curran

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Songthip Ounpraseuth

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Jean C. McSweeney

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Ann M. Cheney

University of California

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LeaVonne Pulley

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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