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Featured researches published by Kirk D. Henny.


Aids and Behavior | 2011

Efficacy of Structural-Level Condom Distribution Interventions: A Meta-Analysis of U.S. and International Studies, 1998–2007

Mahnaz R. Charania; Nicole Crepaz; Carolyn Guenther-Gray; Kirk D. Henny; Adrian Liau; Leigh A. Willis; Cynthia M. Lyles

This systematic review examines the overall efficacy of U.S. and international-based structural-level condom distribution interventions (SLCDIs) on HIV risk behaviors and STIs and identifies factors associated with intervention efficacy. A comprehensive literature search of studies published from January 1988 through September 2007 yielded 21 relevant studies. Significant intervention effects were found for the following outcomes: condom use, condom acquisition/condom carrying, delayed sexual initiation among youth, and reduced incident STIs. The stratified analyses for condom use indicated that interventions were efficacious for various groups (e.g., youth, adults, males, commercial sex workers, clinic populations, and populations in areas with high STI incidence). Interventions increasing the availability of or accessibility to condoms or including additional individual, small-group or community-level components along with condom distribution were shown to be efficacious in increasing condom use behaviors. This review suggests that SLCDIs provide an efficacious means of HIV/STI prevention.


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

Associations between substance use, sexual risk taking and HIV treatment adherence among homeless people living with HIV

Mark S. Friedman; Michael P. Marshal; Ron Stall; Daniel P. Kidder; Kirk D. Henny; Cari Courtenay-Quirk; Angela Aidala; Scott Royal; David R. Holtgrave

Abstract Prior research suggests that the interconnections between substance use, HIV risk and lack of adherence to HIV medications are especially strong among homeless individuals. Thus, study of these interconnections warrants public health attention. The objectives of this paper are to describe patterns of alcohol and drug use, associations between substance use and participation in high-risk sex, and associations between substance use and adherence to HIV treatment regimens among a sample of 602 homeless or unstably housed HIV-seropositive individuals who are part of a housing-based intervention – the Housing and Health Study. Participants experienced high levels of substance use. Significant associations were found between substance use and adherence to HIV treatment medications, and between substance use and high-risk sexual practices within the entire group. Group analyses by sexual orientation/gender show that the association between substance use and treatment adherence is found primarily among heterosexual males whereas the relationship between several drugs and high-risk sexual practices is strongest among gay and bisexual men. Health professionals working with HIV-seropositive individuals should routinely ascertain housing status and screen for substance use and risky sex.


Aids and Behavior | 2012

Efficacy of HIV/STI Behavioral Interventions for Heterosexual African American Men in the United States: A Meta-Analysis

Kirk D. Henny; Nicole Crepaz; Cynthia M. Lyles; Khiya J. Marshall; Latrina W. Aupont; Elizabeth D. Jacobs; Adrian Liau; Sima M. Rama; Linda S. Kay; Leigh A. Willis; Mahnaz R. Charania

This meta-analysis estimates the overall efficacy of HIV prevention interventions to reduce HIV sexual risk behaviors and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among heterosexual African American men. A comprehensive search of the literature published during 1988–2008 yielded 44 relevant studies. Interventions significantly reduced HIV sexual risk behaviors and STIs. The stratified analysis for HIV sexual risk behaviors indicated that interventions were efficacious for studies specifically targeting African American men and men with incarceration history. In addition, interventions that had provision/referral of medical services, male facilitators, shorter follow-up periods, or emphasized the importance of protecting family and significant others were associated with reductions in HIV sexual risk behaviors. Meta-regression analyses indicated that the most robust intervention component is the provision/referral of medical services. Findings indicate that HIV interventions for heterosexual African American men might be more efficacious if they incorporated a range of health care services rather than HIV/STI-related services alone.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2013

Condom Use and Concurrent Partnering among Heterosexually Active African American Men: A Qualitative Report.

Victoria Frye; Kim Williams; Keosha T. Bond; Kirk D. Henny; Malik Cupid; Linda Weiss; Debbie Lucy; Beryl A. Koblin

African Americans are overrepresented among heterosexual cases of HIV/AIDS in the USA. Inconsistent condom use and concurrent partnering are two sexual behaviors driving the heterosexual HIV epidemic in the African American community. To inform the development of an HIV prevention behavioral intervention to decrease concurrent partnering and increase condom use among African American heterosexual men, we conducted formative research, including 61 structured interviews, 5 focus groups with 25 men, and 30 in-depth qualitative interviews between July and December 2009. We used a grounded theoretical approach and categorizing strategies to code and analyze the qualitative data. Results around condom use confirmed earlier findings among heterosexual men in general: condoms diminish pleasure, interfere with erection, and symbolize infidelity. Although valued by some as a form of disease prevention and pregnancy prevention, condoms are often used only with specific types of female partners, such as new or casual partners, or due to visual risk assessment. Sex partner concurrency was described as normative and ascribed to men’s “natural” desire to engage in a variety of sexual activities or their high sex drive, with little recognition of the role it plays in the heterosexual HIV epidemic. Fatherhood emerged among many men as a crucial life event and compelling motivation for reducing sexual risk behavior. Based on these results, we conclude that existing HIV prevention efforts to improve attitudes towards and motivate use of condoms either have not reached or have not been successful with African American heterosexual men. In designing behavioral interventions to decrease concurrent partnering and increase condom use, addressing negative attitudes towards condoms and partner risk assessment is critical, as is integrating novel motivational approaches related to identity as fathers and men in the African American community.


Aids Education and Prevention | 2014

Barbershop Talk With Brothers: using community-based participatory research to develop and pilot test a program to reduce HIV risk among Black heterosexual men.

Tracey E. Wilson; Marilyn Fraser-White; Kim Williams; Angelo R Pinto; Francis Agbetor; Brignel Camilien; Kirk D. Henny; Ruth Browne; Yolene Gousse; Tonya Taylor; Humberto Brown; Raekiela D. Taylor; Michael A. Joseph

There is a need for feasible, evidence-based interventions that support HIV risk reduction among heterosexual Black men. In this article, we describe the process for development of the Barbershop Talk With Brothers (BTWB) program and evaluation. The BTWB program is a theoretically grounded and community-based HIV prevention program that seeks to improve individual skills and motivation to decrease sexual risk, and that builds mens interest in and capacity for improving their communitys health. Formative data collection included barbershop observations and barber focus groups, brief behavioral risk assessments of men in barbershops, and focus groups and individual interviews. Based on this information and in consultation with our steering committee, we developed the BTWB program and accompanying program evaluation. From April through November 2011, 80 men were recruited and completed a baseline assessment of a pilot test of the program; 78 men completed the program and 71 completed a 3-month assessment. The pilot evaluation procedures were feasible to implement, and assessments of pre- and post-test measures indicate that key behavioral outcomes and proposed mediators of those outcomes changed in hypothesized directions. Specifically, attitudes and self-efficacy toward consistent condom use improved, and respondents reported lower levels of sexual risk behavior from baseline to follow-up (all p < 0.05). Perceptions of community empowerment also increased (p = 0.06). While HIV stigma decreased, this difference did not reach statistical significance. Our approach to community-engaged program development resulted in an acceptable, feasible approach to reaching and educating heterosexual Black men about HIV prevention in community settings.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2013

Straight Talk for African-American heterosexual men: results of a single-arm behavioral intervention trial.

Victoria Frye; Kirk D. Henny; Sebastian Bonner; Kim Williams; Keosha T. Bond; Donald R. Hoover; Debbie Lucy; Emily Greene; Beryl A. Koblin

Abstract In the United States, heterosexual transmission is the second leading cause of HIV/AIDS, and two-thirds of all heterosexually acquired cases diagnosed between 2005 and 2008 occurred among African-Americans. Few HIV prevention interventions have been designed specifically for African-American heterosexual men not seeking clinical treatment. Here we report results of a single-arm intervention trial of a theory-based HIV prevention intervention designed to increase condom use, reduce concurrent partnering and increase HIV testing among heterosexually active African-American men living in high HIV prevalence areas of New York City. We tested our hypothesis using McNemar discordant pairs exact test for binary variables and paired t-tests for continuous variables. We observed statistically significant declines in mean number of total and new female partners, unprotected sex partners, and partner concurrency in both primary and nonprimary sex partnerships between baseline and 3 months postintervention.


Preventive Medicine | 2017

HIV acquisition and transmission among men who have sex with men and women: What we know and how to prevent it

Donna Hubbard McCree; Alexandra M. Oster; William L. Jeffries; Damian Denson; Ashley C. Lima; Hilary Whitman; Wade Ivy; Kirk D. Henny

Men who have sex with men and women (MSMW) compose a subset of men who have sex with men (MSM) and represent an estimated 35% of MSM. Research on the HIV risk behaviors of MSMW has largely focused on their behaviors in comparison to men who have sex with men only (MSMO). Results suggest that compared to MSMO, MSMW are less likely to have ever had an HIV test, are at greater risk of being unaware of their HIV infection and are less likely to have encountered HIV prevention activities or materials. Additional research is needed to provide a more comprehensive understanding of the unique sexual behaviors and lived experience of MSMW as a group in order to better inform HIV prevention efforts. The purpose of this paper is to summarize existing data and discuss strategies to reduce HIV acquisition and transmission among MSMW.


Archive | 2010

HIV Behavioral Interventions for Heterosexual African American Men: A Critical Review of Cultural Competence

Kirk D. Henny; Kim Williams; Jocelyn Patterson

In the United States, the rate of HIV infection transmitted through high-risk heterosexual contact is disproportionately higher among African American than among persons of other races or ethnicities (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], 2009). Therefore, African American men who have sex with women represent a critical target for behavioral interventions designed to reduce HIV incidence in this community. Among men in the United States, African Americans account for most of the HIV infections transmitted through high-risk heterosexual contact: African Americans, 63%; Hispanics, 21%; whites, 13% (CDC, 2009). In addition, nearly half (44%) of the recent HIV/AIDS cases among African American women, were acquired through high-risk heterosexual contact (CDC, 2009). Because most sexual-partner networks are intraracial (Laumann, Ellingson, Mahay, Paik, & Youm, 2004), interventions that reduce high-risk sexual behaviors among heterosexual AA men are likely to reduce HIV infection in the African American community.


Archives of Sexual Behavior | 2018

“My Sexuality…It Creates a Stress”: HIV-Related Communication Among Bisexual Black and Latino Men, New York City

Kirk D. Henny; Kathryn Drumhiller; Madeline Y. Sutton; Jose E. Nanin

Men who have sex with men and women (including bisexual men) comprise 35% of all men who have sex with men (MSM) in the U.S. It is estimated that 121,800 men who have been bisexually active within the past year are living with HIV in the U.S. Communication about HIV may result in risk-reduction behaviors. However, little is known about the nature or context for HIV prevention communication among bisexual men, particularly for blacks and Hispanic/Latinos who are disproportionately at greater HIV risk. Therefore, we explored patterns and contexts of HIV-related communications occurring within personal social networks among bisexual black and Hispanic/Latino men. Using respondent-driven sampling methods, we conducted semi-structured interviews from 2011 to 2012 among 36 participants living in New York City. We examined interview responses from participants for main themes using computer-assisted thematic analyses. The three main themes identified were: (1) communication strategies (e.g., “You can tell a lot from how a person responds just by the tone of their voice”), (2) barriers (e.g., “My sexuality…it creates a stress”), and (3) motivations for these communications (e.g., “I know that’s a(n) issue in the black community…if I could help another brother, I will do it”). Our findings can inform HIV prevention efforts such as social messaging campaigns and other risk-reduction interventions designed for bisexual men.


JMIR Research Protocols | 2018

Using eHealth to Reach Black and Hispanic Men Who Have Sex With Men Regarding Treatment as Prevention and Preexposure Prophylaxis: Protocol for a Small Randomized Controlled Trial

Jacob J. van den Berg; Taylor Silverman; M. Isabel Fernandez; Kirk D. Henny; Zaneta Gaul; Madeline Y. Sutton; Don Operario

Background Black and Hispanic men who have sex with men in the United States continue to be disproportionately affected by HIV and AIDS. Uptake of and knowledge about biobehavioral HIV prevention approaches, such as treatment as prevention and preexposure prophylaxis, are especially low in these populations. eHealth campaigns and social media messaging about treatment as prevention and preexposure prophylaxis may help to fill this gap in knowledge and lead to increased uptake of such strategies; however, no evidence exists of the effects of these targeted forms of communication on treatment as prevention and preexposure prophylaxis uptake in these populations. Objective We describe the protocol for a 3-part study aiming to develop and evaluate an eHealth intervention with information about treatment as prevention and preexposure prophylaxis for HIV-positive and HIV-negative black and Hispanic men who have sex with men. Methods Phases 1 and 2 will involve focus groups and cognitive interviews with members of the target populations, which we will use to create a culturally tailored, interactive website and applicable social media messaging for these men. Phase 3 will be a small randomized controlled trial of the eHealth intervention, in which participants will receive guided social media messages plus the newly developed website (active arm) or the website alone (control arm), with assessments at baseline and 6 months. Results Participant recruitment began in August 2017 and will end in August 2020. Conclusions Public health interventions are greatly needed to increase knowledge about and uptake of biobehavioral HIV prevention strategies such as treatment as prevention and preexposure prophylaxis among black and Hispanic men who have sex with men. eHealth communication campaigns offer a strategy for engaging these populations in health communication about biobehavioral HIV prevention. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03404531; https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03404531 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/70myofp0R). Registered Report Identifier RR1-10.2196/11047

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Kim Williams

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Cari Courtenay-Quirk

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Daniel P. Kidder

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Damian Denson

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Keosha T. Bond

New York Academy of Medicine

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Madeline Y. Sutton

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Ron Stall

University of Pittsburgh

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Victoria Frye

City University of New York

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