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Dive into the research topics where Leslie Clark is active.

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Family Planning Perspectives | 1997

Sexual initiation with older male partners and subsequent HIV risk behavior among female adolescents.

Kim S. Miller; Leslie Clark; Janet S. Moore

Data from a 1993-1994 survey of 150 black and Hispanic teenagers were used to examine differences in HIV risk-related behavior between young women who have a first sexual partner three or more years older than themselves and those whose first partner is their age. Compared with teenagers whose first partner had been roughly their age, the 35% of adolescents with an older partner had been younger at first intercourse (13.8 years vs. 14.6) and less likely to use a condom at first intercourse (63% vs. 82%). They also were less likely to report having used a condom at last intercourse (29% vs. 44%) or having used condoms consistently over their lifetime (37% vs. 56%) or in the previous six months (44% vs. 66%). Some 38% of teenagers with an older first partner had ever been pregnant, compared with 12% of those with a peer-age first partner. The mean number of partners and history of sexually transmitted diseases did not differ between the two groups.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1998

The Family Health Project: psychosocial adjustment of children whose mothers are HIV infected.

Rex Forehand; Ric G. Steele; Lisa Armistead; Edward Morse; Patricia M. Simon; Leslie Clark

: The psychosocial adjustment of 87 inner-city African American children 6-11 years old whose mothers were HIV infected was compared with that of 149 children from a similar sociodemographic background whose mothers did not report being HIV infected. Children were not identified as being HIV infected. Mother reports, child reports, and standardized reading achievement scores were used to assess 4 domains of adjustment: externalizing problems, internalizing problems, cognitive competence, and prosocial competence. The results indicated that, on average, children from both groups had elevated levels of behavior problem scores and low reading achievement scores when compared with national averages. Relative to children whose mothers were not infected, those whose mothers were HIV infected were reported to have more difficulties in all domains of psychosocial adjustment. Potential family processes that may explain the findings are discussed.


Journal of Family Psychology | 1997

The impact of maternal HIV infection on parenting in inner-city African American families.

Beth A. Kotchick; Rex Forehand; Gene H. Brody; Lisa Armistead; Patricia M. Simon; Edward Morse; Leslie Clark

Parenting behavior and its association with child psychosocial adjustment were examined in inner-city African American families. Participants included 86 HIV-infected women and their noninfected children and 148 HIV-seronegative women and their noninfected children. Interview data were collected concerning maternal physical health, parenting behaviors, and child psychosocial adjustment. The results indicated that mother-child relationship quality and monitoring were important parenting factors for adaptive child psychosocial functioning. HIV-infected mothers reported poorer mother-child relationship quality and less monitoring of their childrens activities than did noninfected mothers, suggesting that maternal HIV infection may disrupt effective parenting. Directions for future research and clinical implications are discussed.


Social Science & Medicine | 1999

Determinants of depression and HIV-related worry among HIV-positive women who have recently given birth, Bangkok, Thailand

Anna Bennetts; Nathan Shaffer; Chomnad Manopaiboon; Pattrawan Chaiyakul; Wimol Siriwasin; Philip A. Mock; Kunyarat Klumthanom; Sumaleelak Sorapipatana; Chanidapa Yuvasevee; Sujira Jalanchavanapate; Leslie Clark

HIV-infected pregnant women have been the focus of considerable research related to biomedical issues of mother-to-child transmission worldwide. However, there have been few reports on the psychological well-being of new mothers with HIV, either in developed or developing countries. As part of a perinatal HIV transmission and family impact study in Bangkok, predictors of psychological scales were evaluated from interview data (N = 129) collected 18-24 months postpartum. Standardised questionnaires were used to assess depressive symptoms and HIV-related worry. Depressive symptomatology and HIV-related worry were common amongst these women. Multivariate logistic regression analysis identified several factors that predicted these psychological outcomes. High depression scores were associated with women who were no longer in a relationship with their partner (odds ratio (OR) 5.72, confidence interval (CI) 2.18-14.97) and who used venting coping strategies (OR 2.15, CI 1.44-3.21). Higher levels of HIV-related worry were associated with women whose babies were HIV-infected (OR 3.51, CI 1.28-10.69), who had not disclosed their HIV status to others (OR 3.05, CI 1.29-7.24) and who reported that their HIV-infection was something about which their family would be ashamed (OR 3.44, CI 1.34-9.77). Based on the current findings, intervention strategies we propose are psychological interventions which address disclosure issues, feelings of shame and coping strategies as well as financial assistance for single mothers. Interventions that require few resources such as group counselling or support merit special consideration.


Aids and Behavior | 1999

African-American Women and Self-Disclosure of HIV Infection: Rates, Predictors, and Relationship to Depressive Symptomatology

Lisa Armistead; Edward Morse; Rex Forehand; Patricia Morse; Leslie Clark

Unlike the prevalence rate of AIDS diagnoses for men, the prevalence rate for women has not reached a plateau. Moreover, the rate of AIDS diagnosis for African-American women is 17 times higher than for White women. In the context of considerable stress, these women must grapple with the question of to whom they can disclose their HIV diagnosis with minimal risk of negative consequences. This study examines patterns of disclosure to significant others, predictors of disclosure, and the relationship between disclosure and psychological functioning. Analyses indicated that women disclosed at varying rates to six different categories of others. Disclosure to mothers (66%) was most common, followed by disclosure to partners (56%). Rates of disclosure to children (28%) and fathers (25%) were lowest. Womens illness status predicted disclosure to father and friends. Only disclosure to partner was significantly related to womens psychological functioning: Fewer symptoms of depression were evident in women who had disclosed their HIV status to their partners compared to those who had not disclosed.


Behaviour Research and Therapy | 2000

Child resiliency in inner-city families affected by HIV: the role of family variables.

Robin L. Dutra; Rex Forehand; Lisa Armistead; Gene H. Brody; Edward Morse; Patricia Morse; Leslie Clark

This study examined the role of family variables in child resiliency within a sample of African-American, inner-city children whose mothers are HIV-infected. Variables from three dimensions of the family were included: family structural variables, maternal variables, and mother-child (parenting) variables. The participants were 82 children between the ages of 6 and 11 and their HIV-infected mothers. Correlational analyses indicated that resiliency was associated only with three parenting variables: parent-child relationship, parental monitoring, and parental structure in the home. Hierarchical regression analyses indicated a multiplicative relationship between parental monitoring and parent-child relationship and between parental monitoring and parental structure in the home, suggesting that parenting variables potentiate each other. Clinical implications of the findings are considered.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 1998

Impact of HIV on families of HIV-infected women who have recently given birth Bangkok Thailand.

Chomnad Manopaiboon; Nathan Shaffer; Leslie Clark; Chaiporn Bhadrakom; Wimol Siriwasin; Sanay Chearskul; Wanida Suteewan; Jaranit Kaewkungwal; Anna Bennetts; Timothy D. Mastro

The objective of this study was to assess changes in the family situation of HIV-infected women who have recently given birth. As part of a prospective perinatal HIV transmission study, interviews were conducted with a subset of HIV-infected women at 18 to 24 months postpartum, and answers were compared with baseline information obtained during pregnancy. Standardized scales were used to assess levels of psychosocial functioning. A convenience sample of 129 HIV-infected women enrolled during pregnancy was interviewed at 18 to 24 months postpartum. At delivery, the women were young (median age, 22 years), primiparous (57%), and asymptomatic (93%). When baseline and follow-up data were compared, more women were living alone (1% versus 6%; p = 0.03), fewer women were living with their partners (98% versus 73%; p < 0.001), and 30% of families had reduced incomes. At follow-up, 10% of partners had died, and more partners than wives had become ill or died (21% versus 4%; p = 0.02). Most children (78%) were living with their mothers, but only 57% of the HIV-infected women were the primary caretakers. Fewer women had disclosed their HIV status to others (e.g., family, friends) than to their partners (34% versus 84%; p < 0.001), largely because of fear of disclosure. The women appeared to have high levels of depression and worry. The womens greatest worries were about their childrens health and the familys future. Within 2 years after childbirth, substantial change within the families of HIV-infected women was evident. These were manifest by partner illness or death, family separation, reduced family income, shifting responsibilities for child care, and signs of depression and isolation. Providing family support is a major challenge in Thailand as the perinatal HIV epidemic progresses.


International journal of adolescent medicine and health | 2004

Predictors of sexual involvement among adolescents in rural Jamaica.

JoAna Stallworth; Michele Roofe; Leslie Clark; John E. Ehiri; Snigdha Mukherjee; Sharina D. Person; Pauline E. Jolly

Early sexual activity of adolescents is associated with increased risk of teenage pregnancy, sexually transmitted infections including HIV, and higher maternal/perinatal morbidity and mortality. HIV and adolescent pregnancy are among the most serious public health problems in Jamaica. The objective of this study was to identify the potential predictors of adolescent sexual activity in Jamaica. A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 788 students 13-19 years of age in Jamaica. A questionnaire containing items on socio-demographic characteristics such as age and gender, and scales on adolescent values about sexual activity, self-efficacy for abstinence, parental love, and depression were administered to adolescents at secondary schools in the parish of Hanover. Reliability analysis of the scales, descriptive statistics, and logistic regression to determine predictors of sexual activity were conducted. Approximately 62% of adolescents who responded reported previous sexual intercourse and 38% reported never having had sex. The mean age for sexual debut was 13.6 years. Logistic regression revealed delay values (values towards delaying sexual activity) as protective (OR=0.16, CI=0.09-0.26) against involvement in sexual activity. Risk factors for sexual activity included being older (OR=1.9, CI=1.50-2.50), being male (OR=2.26, CI=1.39-3.68) and having grown-up values (OR=1.49, CI=1.05-2.12). Contrary to expectations, having higher self-efficacy skills was predictive (OR=1.47, CI=1.05-2.05) of adolescent sexual involvement. Analyses by gender revealed that delay and grownup values predicted male sexual activity, while self-efficacy, paternal love and delay values predicted female behavior. These findings show the importance of age, gender, self-efficacy, delay and grown-up values in predicting sexual activity in adolescents and indicate the need for gender-specific interventions for Jamaican adolescents.


International Journal of Rehabilitation and Health | 2000

HIV Infection in Inner-City African American Women: The Role of Optimism in Predicting Depressive Symptomatology

Danielle Devine; Rex Forehand; Edward Morse; Patricia M. Simon; Leslie Clark; Michael H. Kernis

This study examined the role of optimism in longitudinally predicting depressive symptomatology. Participants were 160 inner-city African American women, 96 who reported no history of HIV infection and 64 who reported current HIV infection. HIV-infected women, relative to the women without a history of HIV infection, were less optimistic and had higher levels of depressive symptomatology based on both self-report and interviewer rating. Consistent with the proposed hypothesis, a curvilinear relationship emerged between optimism at Time 1 and depressive symptomatology at Time 2 in both samples. However, the shape of the curve differed substantially for the two samples. As predicted, therewas a U-shaped curve for the noninfected women; however, for the HIV-infected women the curve had an inverted U-shape. We discuss these findings in lightof previous conceptualizations of optimism and psychological functioning, the contextual environment in which the participating women live, unique contributions of HIV to the optimism–depressive symptomatology, and the implicationsfor infected women.


Archive | 1999

Stress, Coping, Social Support, and Illness

Leslie Clark; Leslie A. Aaron; Mary Ann Littleton; Katina Pappas-Deluca; Jason B. Avery; Vel S. McKleroy

Social and behavioral scientists have a great deal to offer to public and private sector efforts directed toward health promotion and disease prevention. This chapter focuses on stress, coping, and social support. Research questions in these domains revolve around the interconnections among individuals’ emotions, motivation, goals, cognitions, and social relationships. The utility of such research lies in establishing behavioral predictors of individuals’ likelihood of becoming ill and the ease of their recovery from illness (Clark, 1994). A second contribution lies in the abilities of these fields to inform and guide health promotion and disease prevention intervention.

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Kim S. Miller

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Patricia M. Simon

Louisiana State University

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Patricia Morse

Louisiana State University

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Beth A. Kotchick

Loyola University Maryland

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