Improving the Sexual Health of Young People (under 25) in High-Risk Populations: A Systematic Review of Behavioural and Psychosocial Interventions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
- Were a randomized controlled trial with ≥2 arms;
- Reported sufficient data to satisfy PRISMA and Cochrane guidelines for inclusion in the review;
- Were published in English.
- The primary aim of the study was not to address sexual health;
- There was a later publication of results from the same trial—the paper reporting the longest follow-up data was chosen.
2.3. Data Retrieval
2.4. Data Screening
2.5. Data Extraction
2.6. Quality Assessment of Interventions
3. Results
3.1. Search Results
3.2. Included Trials
3.2.1. Alcohol and Other Drug (AOD) Use
3.2.2. Ethnic Minorities
3.2.3. Homelessness
3.2.4. Justice-Involved Youth
3.2.5. LGBTQI+ (Including YMSM)
3.2.6. Mental Ill-Health
3.2.7. Out-of-Home Care
3.3. Quality Assessment
4. Discussion
4.1. Implications and Applicability
4.2. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Study | Study Population | Age Range (Years) | Setting | N Randomised (INTV vs. C) | Follow Up Period (Months) | Intervention (s) | Dose | Control | Sexual Health Outcomes | Outcome for Active vs. Control |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AOD Use | ||||||||||
Letourneau et al., 2017; USA | AOD use; justice-involved youth | 11–17 | Outpatient clinics | 107 (45 vs. 62) | 3, 6, 9, 12 | Family-focussed risk-reduction intervention for SUD and sexual health (Risk Reduction Therapy for Adolescents) combined with contingency management | 24 × weekly sessions (60–90 min each) delivered over 6–7 months | Usual care | B: Condom use, sex after substance use, HIV risk behaviours | B: No significant findings for any sexual health outcomes. |
St. Lawrence, et al. 1995(b); Jackson, MS, USA | AOD use | 13–17 | Residential drug treatment facility | 34 (17 vs. 17) | None | Behaviour skills training HIV risk reduction | 6 × 90 min group sessions | Risk education-only control | K + A: AIDS knowledge test, attitudes towards HIV prevention, condom attitudes. B: Sexual risk behaviours over 2 months pre and post intervention | K + A: Post-INTV, INTV group had better AIDS knowledge (p = 0.01), attitudes towards HIV prevention (p = 0.05) and attitudes towards condom (p = 0.05). B: Post-INTV, INTV group less likely to engage in sexual risk behaviours than C, including coercions into unwanted sexual activity, exchange sex for money or drugs, and engaging in casual sex (all, p < 0.05). |
St Lawrence et al., 2002; MS, USA | AOD use | Mean = 16 (full range not reported) | Residential drug treatment facilities | 161 (Group sizes not reported.) | 6, 12 | Sexual health information plus behavioural skills training (I+B), or information plus skills training plus risk-sensitization motivational component (I+B+M). | 3 × 90 min sessions/week, for 4 weeks. | Sexual health information-only control | K + A: AIDS risk knowledge test, condom attitudes, attitudes toward HIV prevention, self-efficacy and perceived risk. B: Social skill and anger management skill acquisition, self-reported sexual behaviour (unprotected vaginal, oral and anal intercourse; number of partners). | K + A: Significant group x time interactions for AIDS knowledge, attitudes towards prevention and condom attitudes (all, p < 0.05), and for perceived risk (p < 0.01). B: Significant group x time interactions for number of sex partners, unprotected sex frequency, condom use frequency, %age of condom use, (all p < 0.05). |
Suffoletto et al., 2013; PA, USA | AOD use (females) | 18–25 | Hospital emergency department | 52 (23 vs. 29) | 3 | Sexual risk reduction intervention delivered via text message. | A series of interactive messages delivered weekly for 12 weeks. | Health behaviour survey with weekly text message reminders (non-interactive). | B: Condom use, condom use frequency, abstinence, AOD use, AOD use prior to sex | All results ns. |
Ethnic Minorities | ||||||||||
Kipke, Boyer and Hein, 1993; New York, NY, USA | Ethnic minority (Latino and African-American) | 12–16 | Community-based agencies | 87 (41 vs. 46) | none | HIV prevention skills training (ARREST) | 3 × 90 min group sessions | Wait-list control | K + A: HIV knowledge, perception of risk B: Risky sexual behaviours, frequency of sex acts SW: assertiveness and communication skills | K + A: Post-INTV, INTV group had greater HIV knowledge (p < 0.001), perception of risk (p < 0.01), decreased negative attitudes about HIV (p < 0.05) B: ns SW: ability to refuse high-risk (p < 0.001) and propose low-risk behavioural alternatives (p< 0.001). |
Smith et al., 2020; Texas, USA | Ethnic minority (Hispanic, female) teenage mothers | 15–18 | In-home | 84 (42 vs. 42) | 12 | In-home postpartum educational support plus case management services, plus: in-home and group parenting education, life skills groups, and teen leadership council activities. | Educational support for 4 h/week for 6 weeks, plus biweekly 90 min face-to-face support worker meetings. | In-home postpartum educational support plus case management services. | B: Condom use to prevent pregnancy, condom use to prevent STIs | B: Both groups improved condom use over time (OR 3.21). No significant differences between INTV and C. |
Tingey et al., 2015; USA | Ethnic minority (American Indian) | 13–19 | Basketball camp in reservation-based community | 267 (138 vs. 129) | 6, 12 | Culturally-sensitive HIV risk reduction education and behavioural skills training | 8 structured lessons delivered to peer groups of 8–10 participants of the same sex and age, 90 min/day. | 8 structured sessions of non-HIV educational control delivered in a large group setting (~50 participants) of mixed sex/age | K + A: Condom use self-efficacy, knowledge regarding prevention and transmission of HIV/AIDS Intent to use a condom | K + A: INTV group better condom use self-efficacy post-camp (p < 0.005), 6 m (p < 0.005) and 12 m (p < 0.05); higher knowledge regarding prevention and transmission of HIV/AIDS post-camp (p < 0.01), 6 m (p < 0.01), at 12 m ns; more likely to intend to use a condom at next sex post-camp (p < 0.01), 6 m and 12 ns. |
Villarruel, Jemmott and Jemmott, 2006; Philadelphia, USA | Ethnic minority (Latino American) | 13–18 | Schools | 656 (312 vs. 344) | 3, 6, 12 | Culturally sensitive HIV prevention intervention (¡Cuídate!) | 2 × 4 h group sessions on 2 consecutive Saturdays | Generic health-promotion control delivered in same format at INTV | B: self-report measures of sexual activity (frequency, multiple partners, unprotected intercourse) and condom use (consistency, use at last intercourse) | B: Across follow-ups, INTV were less likely to report sexual intercourse (OR 0.66), multiple partners (OR 0.53), and days of unprotected intercourse (RR 0.47) and more likely to report using condoms consistently (OR, 1.91). Condom use at last sex = ns |
Homeless | ||||||||||
Slesnick and Kang, 2007; USA | Homeless; AOD | 14–22 | Drop-in centre for homeless youth | 180 (96 vs. 84) | 3, 6 | Community reinforcement approach therapy + HIV education and skills training (later developed from BART) | 12 × 50 min therapy sessions + 4 × 50 min HIV education/skills practice sessions, offered concurrently | TAU at the ‘drop in centre’ | B: ‘Health Risk questionnaire’ including freq. of condom use, no. sexual partners, frequency of intercourse | B: Post hoc analysis revealed younger youths in INTV group had more frequent usage of condoms than the older youths control (p < 0.01). Other outcomes ns |
Thompson et al., 2020; North-eastern USA | Homeless; AOD | 18–21 | Inner-city crisis shelter | 40 (20 vs. 20) | 2 weeks | Educational, behaviour-tracking smartphone app plus brief motivational intervention | Brief daily app use 1/day for 28 days, plus two counselling sessions to discuss risk behaviours and set goals | TAU | B: Frequency of unprotected sex, freq. of drug use prior to sex, freq. of alcohol prior to sex. | B: At FU, INTV group had fewer episodes of unprotected sex than C, p = 0.01, and fewer episodes of sex after drug use, p = 0.02. |
Tucker et al., 2017; Los Angeles, CA, USA | Homeless; AOD; ethnic minority | 18–25 | Drop-in centres for homeless youth | 200 (100 vs. 100) | 3 | Group-based MI intervention to reduce risky sexual behaviour and substance use (AWARE) | 4 × 45 min groups | TAU | K + A: Condom use self-efficacy, motivation to change condom use B: Number of sex partners and proportion of unprotected sex | K + A: Both outcomes ns. B: Among those with multiple sex partners, INTV = sig decrease in proportion of unprotected sexual events (p < 0.05), other outcomes ns |
Justice-Involved Youth | ||||||||||
Bryan et al., 2018; New Mexico, USA | Justice-involved youth; AOD | 14–18 | Short-term youth detention facility | 460 (162 vs. 155 vs. 143) | 12 | Sexual risk reduction plus alcohol and cannabis content (SRRI + ETOH + THC) and SRRI plus alcohol content (SRRI + ETOH) vs. SSRI only | 1 × 3 hr groups, up to 6 same sex participants. 2 hrs intervention, 1 hr for assessments. Based on ‘motivational enhancement therapy’. | SRRI only | B: Condom use, risky sexual behaviour Bio: STI incidence | B: Not reported. Bio: Lower incidence of STI diagnosis at FU in SRRI + ETOH + THC (3.9%) vs. SRRI + ETOH (10.2%; OR = 0.29) and vs. SRRI (12%; OR = 0.36) |
Bryan, Schmiege, and Broaddus 2009; Denver, CO USA | Justice-involved youth; AOD | 14–17 | Short-term youth detention facility | 484 (165 vs. 157 vs. 162) | 3, 6, 9, 12 | Sexual and alcohol risk reduction psychosocial intervention (GPI) or GPI + motivational enhancement therapy (GMET) | 1 × 3–4 hr group, same gender | HIV/STI prevention information-only control (GINFO) (1 hr) | B: Condom use, frequency of intercourse while drinking | B: At 3, 6 and 9 month FUs, INTV groups mitigated tendency to decrease condom use over time compared with C, p < 0.01. Other findings ns. |
Goldberg et al., 2009; Ontario, Canada | Justice-involved youth | 12–18 | Young offender secure custody facilities | 391 | 3, 6 | HIV risk reduction education intervention, or same intervention plus booster session | 6 × 1 h sessions over a 3-week period; or same dose plus one booster session 3 months post intervention | TAU + condensed HIV education session at trial conclusion. | K + A: Attitudes toward HIV prevention, risk behaviour knowledge, condom attitudes, safety behaviour self-efficacy B: Condom use | K + A: At 6 months, males in both INTV groups had increased HIV knowledge (p < 0.001). Females in INTV groups had increased condom attitude scores (p = 0.004). Males in booster group had increased prevention attitude scores (p = 0.017). B: Females in booster INTV group were more likely to use condoms consistently (OR = 4.20) |
Kerr, Leve and Chamberlain, 2009; OR, USA | Justice-involved youth (female) | 13–17 | Foster care homes | 166 (81 vs. 85) | 24 | Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care–included a component that targeted HIV-risk behaviours | Ongoing elements throughout time in MTFC | TAU-Group care control | B: Pregnancy | B: Odds of pregnancy during FU were 2.44 times greater for C than INTV (p < 0.01) |
St. Lawrence et al., 1999; Southern USA | Justice-involved youth (male) | Mean 15.8 | State reformatory | 361 (180 vs. 181) | 6 (after release) | sexual risk reduction skills-training-Becoming a Responsible Teen (BART) | 6 × 60 min group sessions, 8–10 participants, twice weekly | Anger management control, 6 sessions | K + A: AIDS knowledge, condom use self-efficacy, condom attitudes scale B: condom skills, %age of unprotected sex | K + A: Post-intervention, INTV = sig higher levels of AIDS knowledge (p < 0.001), condom use self-efficacy (p = 0.01), and positive attitudes about condoms (p = 0.001). B: INTV = sig better condom-use skills (p < 0.005) at post-intervention. Ns Sexual behaviours between groups at FU. |
Tolou-Shams et al., 2011; North Eastern USA | Justice-involved youth; AOD | 12–18 | Juvenile drug courts | 57 (29 vs. 28) | 3 | Group-based HIV prevention and sexual risk reduction with affect management, Parents and Teens for Health (PATH) Program | 5 × 2 h sessions, delivered weekly, five participants per group | Time and attention-matched general health promotion | K + A: Condom use self-efficacy, attitudes towards condoms, partner communication re: condom use B: Condom use at last intercourse, number of partners, sexual activity in past 90 days, substance use during sex, HIV testing | All results ns. |
LGBTQI+ (YMSM) | ||||||||||
Chen, et al., 2011; Multi-site USA | YMSM; HIV+ | 16–24 | HIV clinics | 142 (71 vs. 71) | 6, 9, 12, 15 | Individual MI-based intervention targeting sexual risk behaviour (Healthy Choices) | 4 × sessions, delivered weekly | TAU | B: Condom use | B: Over all FU visits, INTV Ps reported increased likelihood of using condoms (p < 0.001) |
Hidalgo et al., 2015; Chicago, IL, USA | YMSM | 16–20 | LGBT community health centre | 101 (58 vs. 43) | 1.5, 3 | Group-based, interactive HIV and sexual risk reduction skills training (MyPEEPS) | 6 × 2 h group sessions, 2 × week over 3 weeks in groups of 5–10 participants | Group-based, non-interactive sexual health information | K + A: Self-efficacy for safer sex, health-related partner verbal communication, internalised homophobia, B: Number of sex partners, number of unprotected anal sex partners, freq. of unprotected sex (anal and oral), sex acts under the influence of AOD, unprotected anal sex with AOD, condom errors | K + A: All ns. B: INTV Ps less likely to engage in sex under the influence of AOD, p = 0.05. Other findings ns |
Mustanski et al., 2013; Chicago, IL, USA | YMSM; ethnic minority | 18–24 | Online | 102 (50 vs. 52) | 3 | Interactive online HIV prevention intervention (Keep It Up!) | 7 modules in total to complete undertaken in 3 × ~2 h blocks, spaced at least 24 h apart. | online didactic HIV knowledge | K + A: HIV knowledge, attitudes to HIV risk and prevention B: Frequency of unprotected sex acts, condom errors and problems | K + A: All ns. B: At FU, INTV had fewer unprotected sex acts than C (p = 0.04). Other findings ns. |
Philliber, 2021; USA | LGBTQ and questioning youth | 14–22 | Schools, communit-based organisations, conferences | 1401 (551 vs. 515) | 12 | Educational workshop with info on health disparities, role play, safe-sex practices, healthcare self-efficacy and patient rights. | 1 × 3-h session | Time-mateched control activity unrelated to sexual health | K + A: Sexual health knowledge, self-efficacy to advocate for relevant health care B: Incidence of unprotected vaginal, oral and/or anal sex; sexual healthcare participation | K + A: INTV group scored higher on sexual health knowledge (p < 0.001), on self-efficacy generally (p = 0.007) and on self-efficacy to advocate for relevant healthcare, p = 0.02. B: At 12 mo FU, fewer INTV group participants had condomless vaginal sex in previous 3 months than control (p = 0.02) and reported fewer incidents of condomless vaginal sex (p = 0.01). |
Rongkavilit et al., 2015; Bangkok, Thailand | YMSM; HIV+ | 16–25 | HIV/AIDS Research Centre | 74 (37 vs. 37) | 1, 6 | Individual MI-based counselling to reduce risky sex behaviour and either alcohol use or medication adherence (Healthy Choices) | 4 × weekly sessions | Time-matched general health control | B: Condom use, frequency of anal sex, sex with HIV- or unknown partners | B: At 6 mo: Fewer INTV group had engaged in anal sex in the preceding month than C (38% vs. 65%; p = 0.04) Fewer INTV had engaged in sex with a HIV- or unknown status partner than C (26% vs. 62%; p < 0.01). Other findings ns. |
Ybarra et al., 2018; USA | YMSM | 14–18 | Text messaging | 302 (150 vs. 152) | 3 | HIV Preventative Program based on ‘Guy2Guy’, delivered by text messages. | 5 × weeks of daily text messages (8–10 a day) + booster week of messages 6 weeks after end | Time-matched general health control | B: Primary-number condomless sex acts. Secondary-rates of abstinence (for those sexually inexperienced), rates of getting an HIV test. | B: Primary = ns Youths in INTV group who were sexually experienced at baseline were sig more likely to report getting an HIV test at FU. (55% vs. 28%, p < 0.001). |
Mental Ill-Health | ||||||||||
Brown et al., 2014; Multi-site USA | Mental-ill health | 13–18 | Mental health clinics | 721 (227 vs. 259 vs. 235) | 3 | Family-based HIV prevention vs. adolescent only HIV prevention (Project STYLE) | 1 × 8-h group workshop of 4–8 participants, family intervention adolescent and caregiver attended together vs. adolescent only. | General health promotion intervention delivered in same format at INTV | K + A: HIV knowledge, self-efficacy to practise safe sex, B: Sexual activity, condom use, number of partners SW: openness of sex communication with parents | K + A: At FU, family INTV parents had greater HIV knowledge (p < 0.01) than C. B: At FU, INTV groups more likely to use condoms 100% (p = 0.04), more likely to avoid sex (p = 0.05), had fewer incidences of unprotected sex and a greater percentage of protected sex (p = 0.01) than C. SW: Family INTV improved parent-teen sexual communication (p < 0.01). |
Brown et al., 2017; Chicago IL, Providence RI, USA | Mental ill-health–high school students with emotional or behavioural problems | 13–19 | School | 377 (128 vs. 130 vs. 119) | 6 | HIV prevention plus affect management (AM) vs. skills-based HIV prevention (SB) | 12 × 45 min sessions, delivered once or twice per week in mixed gender groups. | General health promotion (HP) intervention delivered in same format at INTV | K + A: HIV knowledge, condom attitudes B: Sexual activity, condom use, intercourse with concurrent substance use | K + A: At FU, HIV knowledge and condom attitudes were both sig better in AM or SB (p < 0.05) than C. B: At FU, sexual activity sig lower in AM vs. C (OR = 0.28), but SB vs. C ns. Condom use more consistent in AM vs. C (OR = 3.42), SB vs. C ns. Substance use ns. |
Out-of-Home Care | ||||||||||
Green et al., 2017; CA, MD and OK, USA | Out-of-home care; justice-involved youth | 13–18 | Group homes | 1037 (517 vs. 520) | 6, 12 | Pregnancy/HIV/STI prevention skills training (Power Through Choices) | 10 × 90 min group sessions, twice a week for 5 weeks | TAU | K + A: Knowledge about sex and HIV, attitudes toward protection, self-efficacy to practice safe sex, intentions re: sex and condom use B: sexual behaviours SW: ability to communicate with partner | K + A: At 6 m and 12 m, INTV sig better knowledge about anatomy and fertility, HIV and STIs, and methods of protection (all p < 0.001). INTV showed more support for methods of protection (p < 0.03) and better knowledge of where to get birth control (p < 0.003). B: All ns SW: INTV sig higher ability to communicate with partner (p < 0.001). |
Oman et al., 2018; CA, MD and OK, USA | Out-of-home care; justice-involved youth | 13–18 | Group homes | 1037 (517 vs. 520) Note: Same sample as Green et al. (2017) | 6, 12 | Pregnancy/HIV/STI prevention skills training (Power Through Choices) | 10 × 90 min group sessions, twice a week for 5 weeks | TAU | B: Sex without condoms/birth control, ever been pregnant/gotten someone pregnant | B: At 12 m, INTV participants were less likely than control to have been, or have gotten somebody, pregnant, AOR = 0.67. |
Slonim-Nevo, et al., 1996; St Louis, MO, USA | Out-of-home care; justice-involved youth; mental ill-health | 12–18 | Residential centres | 268 (group sizes not reported) | 9, 12 | HIV risk reduction skills training vs. HIV discussion groups | 9 × 90–120 min group sessions over 3 weeks | TAU | K + A: knowledge, attitudes and intentions to cope with AIDS-risk situations B: Engagement in unsafe sexual activities | K + I: At 9 and 12 m, AIDS related attitudes ns. Discussion group had greater knowledge about AIDS (p = 0.02) and intentions to cope with AIDS-risk situations knowledge (p = 0.02). B: All ns |
Appendix B
MEDLINE (Ovid) Search Terms
- ((“safe sex” or “unsafe sex” or “sexual risk taking” or “sex* risk behavio*r” or STI or HIV or chlamydia or gonorrhoea or hepatitis or syphilis or “acquired immunodeficiency syndrome” or condom* or “barrier contraception” or “unwanted pregnancy”).ti,ab. or exp *Sexually Transmitted Diseases/or exp *Sexual Health/or exp *Sexual Behavior/or exp *Sex Education/or exp *Sex Education/mt or exp *Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice/or exp *Contraception, Barrier/or exp *Contraception Behavior/or exp *Contraception/or exp *Long-Acting Reversible Contraception/or exp *Hormonal Contraception/or exp *Pregnancy, Unwanted/) and ((“behavio* therapy” or “cognitive therapy” or “psychosocial intervention” or “skills training” or “sex education” or “motivational interview*”).ti,ab. or exp *Psychosocial Intervention/or exp *Behavior Therapy/or exp *Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/or exp *Motivational Interviewing/) and ((youth or “young adult*” or teenage* or “high school student*” or adolescen* or “university student*”.ti,ab.) or exp *Adolescent/or exp *Young Adult/or exp *Child/or exp *Students/or exp *Adolescent Behavior/)
- (alcohol* or binge or ethanol or drink* or “drug use” or “recreational drug*” or “substance use”).ti,ab. or exp *Alcohol Drinking/or exp *Substance-Related Disorders/or exp *Alcoholism/or exp *Illicit Drugs/
- (“minority group*” OR “ethnic minorit*” OR “ethnic group*” OR immigrant* OR “racial group*” OR black OR hispanic OR latin* OR asian OR indigenous OR “native American” OR aboriginal OR “first nations” OR african OR vietnamese OR “hawaii* native” OR asian OR indian OR inuit OR “pacific islander*” OR “american indian*”).ti,ab. or exp *Ethnic Groups/or exp *Minority Groups/or exp *Indigenous Canadians/or exp *Health Services, Indigenous/or exp *Indigenous Peoples/
- (homeless* or “street youth” or “runaway youth”).ti,ab. or exp *Homeless Youth/
- (“juvenile justice” or probation or court* or “law enforcement” or “diversion program” or “juvenile detention”).ti,ab. or exp *Juvenile Delinquency/
- (gay or lesbian* or genderqueer or transgender* or homosexual* or bisexual or bicurious or “female to male” or “male to female” or trans or “men who have sex with men” or MSM or intersex or LGBT or LGBTQ or LGBTQI or “gender transition” or “gender dysphoria” or “gender identity” or “same sex attracted” or “same sex couple” or “same sex couples” or “sexual and gender minorities” or “sexual orientation” or “sexual preference” or “trans wom#n” or “trans m#n” or “trans people” or “women loving women” or “women who have sex with women” or WSW).ti,ab. or exp *”Sexual and Gender Minorities”/
- (“severe mental illness” or “serious mental illness” or “chronic mental illness” or schizophrenia or bipolar or mania or psychosis or schizoaffective or “major depressive disorder” or MDD).ti,ab. or exp *Mental Disorders/
- (“foster care” or “group home*” or “out-of-home care” or “residential care”).ti,ab. or exp *Foster Home Care/
- 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6 or 7 or 8
- 1 and 9
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PICO Element | Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
---|---|---|
Population | Young people ≤25 years old, of any gender, who are members of one of the following high-risk groups:
| Samples including participants >25 years old at start of trial If the trial targeted black American youth as the only ‘high-risk’ criteria given previously completed review in this population. |
Intervention | Any psychosocial or behavioural intervention aimed at promoting sexual health and/or sexual safety-taking behaviours | Any intervention that targets parents of young people rather than the young people directly, or any intervention that is focused solely on promoting abstinence |
Comparison | Any non-pharmacological comparator (e.g., waitlist control) | A pharmacological comparator |
Outcome | Sexual health or safety-taking behaviours, e.g., condom use; Biological indicators of sexual safety-taking behaviour, e.g., STI incidence, unwanted pregnancy; Changes in knowledge of, or attitudes toward, sexual health and safety. Measures of sexual wellbeing e.g., communication skills or relationship satisfaction | Abstinence |
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Brown, E.; Lo Monaco, S.; O’Donoghue, B.; Nolan, H.; Hughes, E.; Graham, M.; Simmons, M.; Gray, R. Improving the Sexual Health of Young People (under 25) in High-Risk Populations: A Systematic Review of Behavioural and Psychosocial Interventions. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 9063. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179063
Brown E, Lo Monaco S, O’Donoghue B, Nolan H, Hughes E, Graham M, Simmons M, Gray R. Improving the Sexual Health of Young People (under 25) in High-Risk Populations: A Systematic Review of Behavioural and Psychosocial Interventions. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(17):9063. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179063
Chicago/Turabian StyleBrown, Ellie, Samantha Lo Monaco, Brian O’Donoghue, Hayley Nolan, Elizabeth Hughes, Melissa Graham, Magenta Simmons, and Richard Gray. 2021. "Improving the Sexual Health of Young People (under 25) in High-Risk Populations: A Systematic Review of Behavioural and Psychosocial Interventions" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 17: 9063. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179063
APA StyleBrown, E., Lo Monaco, S., O’Donoghue, B., Nolan, H., Hughes, E., Graham, M., Simmons, M., & Gray, R. (2021). Improving the Sexual Health of Young People (under 25) in High-Risk Populations: A Systematic Review of Behavioural and Psychosocial Interventions. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(17), 9063. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179063