2016
DOI: 10.5812/ijhrba.32432
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Effectiveness of an Educational Program Based on the Theory of Planned Behavior for Improving Safe Sexual Behaviors Intention among Addicted Males: A Quasi Experimental Study

Abstract: Background: Sexual risk behaviors are the most important risky behaviors that put individuals and the society at risk of serious infectious diseases such as acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and viral Hepatitis, considering the high prevalence of unsafe sexual behavior.

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In Mohammadi Zaidi et al study (30), educational intervention resulted in promotion of individuals' intention to improve their physical conditions 3 and 6 months after the intervention. In the studies by Monsali et al (39) and Allahverdipour et al (40), educational intervention based on theory of planned behavior (TPB) increases the intention of the subjects. The ndings of this study showed that educational intervention based on theory of planned behavior (TPB) resulted in the promotion of preventive behaviors from knee osteoarthritis in women over 40 in the experimental group.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Mohammadi Zaidi et al study (30), educational intervention resulted in promotion of individuals' intention to improve their physical conditions 3 and 6 months after the intervention. In the studies by Monsali et al (39) and Allahverdipour et al (40), educational intervention based on theory of planned behavior (TPB) increases the intention of the subjects. The ndings of this study showed that educational intervention based on theory of planned behavior (TPB) resulted in the promotion of preventive behaviors from knee osteoarthritis in women over 40 in the experimental group.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, INT is assumed to be an immediate predictor of behavior (Silverman et al, 2016;Cronce and Larimer, 2013). Previous empirical studies have extensively applied TPB in targeting intentions as a means to alter behaviors by designing interventions strategies to discontinue addictive behaviors (Pelling and White, 2009;Conner, 2015) in a variety of contexts such as smoking cessation (Ruslan et al, 2018;Zhao et al, 2018;Su et al, 2015), risky sexual behaviors (Moeini et al, 2016), excessive use of social network sites (Ho et al, 2017), alcohol consumption (Haydon et al, 2017), abusive relationships (Edwards et al, 2017), cyberbullying (Heirman and Walrave, 2012), internet gambling (Flack and Morris, 2015), risky sexual behaviors (Moeini et al, 2016) and the discontinuance of social media addiction (Luqman et al, 2018).…”
Section: Theory Of Planned Behavior and Behavioral Intentionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Organizations that aim to concentrate on both physical and psychological factors together have safer working environments at lower risk of employee mental and physical health harm, and consequently, lead to positive workplace behaviors such as work engagement and safety incident reporting [25]. Many safe behavior studies have been based upon generic safety theories and models such as the Health Belief Model [26][27][28][29], the Theory of Planned Behavior [30][31][32][33], the Risk Perception Attitude Framework [34][35][36], and Social Cognitive Theory [37][38][39]. There is also a growing literature supporting the positive effects of safety behavior interventions on safety compliance and participation, injury rates, and near misses in various high-risk industries, including the oil, gas, and petrochemical industry [40][41][42].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%