HEART is a brief web-based program for adolescent girls that provides motivation enhancement, skill-building and information about HIV and other STDs and unplanned pregnancy. The program focuses on developing sexual communication and assertiveness skills.
HEART is a single session intervention with 5 modules that target 5 areas of sexual decision-making:
The program is designed for 10th grade girls (typically ages 14-15). HEART has only been evaluated in the USA. A randomized controlled trial (Widman et al., 2018) was conducted with 221 participants (107 in the intervention group and 114 in the control group).
Study participants were recruited from rural high schools in low-income areas. Girls in both intervention and control groups were roughly one third white, black, or Hispanic, with a slightly higher percentage of white girls in each group. A higher percentage of girls in the control group had mothers who had less than a high school education (24%) than mothers of the girls in the intervention group (19%). Over three quarters of girls in both conditions identified as heterosexual with just under half of both groups reporting ever having engaged in sexual activity. Condom use was slightly higher for the control group at baseline (64%) than the intervention group (57%). Very few girls reported ever having been pregnant across the sample.
HEART has not been evaluated in Australia or with Aboriginal Australians.
Overall, HEART had mixed effects on client outcomes.
Mixed research evidence (with no adverse effects):
HEART is a single session web-based program that lasts for 45 minutes. The program is delivered in school settings and can be completed on a computer, tablet, or smart-phone device.
Modules are taught within a sexual health paradigm emphasizing personal values, positive aspects of sexuality, and the importance of competent interpersonal skills, as well as risk reduction. Inside each module, users receive age-appropriate audio and video clips, tips from other adolescents, interactive games and quizzes, infographics, and skill-building exercises with self-feedback given in real time.
Communication self-efficacy and assertiveness skills are emphasized throughout the program, but particularly in the communication module. In this module, users receive didactic training and modelling from same-age peers. Users can also practice skills through an audio-recording and playback feature whereby they respond to hypothetical scenarios of sexual pressure from a partner depicted with a pre-recorded male voice. Girls record and rate their own responses and continue practicing until they become more comfortable.
The costs for HEART were not reported in the study.
Added material or modifications are necessary to enhance the potency of the HEART program. Sexual assertiveness and negotiation skills are difficult skills to learn and master, so youths will likely need ongoing modelling and opportunities to practice and refine these skills beyond a 45-minute intervention.
Though computerized administration may help youths learn skills in a controlled environment, it is likely that ongoing practice in “real-life” settings will help them sustain communication skills over time.
1 RCT conducted in the USA with 221 participants (Widman et al., 2018).
Widman, L, Golin, CE, Kamke, K, Burnette, JL, & Prinstein, MJ 2018, ‘Sexual assertiveness skills and sexual decision-making in adolescent girls: Randomized controlled trial of an online program’, American Journal of Public Health, vol. 108, pp. 96-102, https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2017.304106
09 Dec 2022
We acknowledge Aboriginal people as the First Nations Peoples of NSW and pay our respects to Elders past, present, and future.
Informed by lessons of the past, Department of Communities and Justice is improving how we work with Aboriginal people and communities. We listen and learn from the knowledge, strength and resilience of Stolen Generations Survivors, Aboriginal Elders and Aboriginal communities.
You can access our apology to the Stolen Generations.