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David W. Pantalone

Researcher at University of Massachusetts Boston

Publications -  135
Citations -  4943

David W. Pantalone is an academic researcher from University of Massachusetts Boston. The author has contributed to research in topics: Men who have sex with men & Sexual minority. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 127 publications receiving 4085 citations. Previous affiliations of David W. Pantalone include University of Washington & University of Massachusetts Amherst.

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Self-report measures of antiretroviral therapy adherence: A review with recommendations for HIV research and clinical management.

TL;DR: It is concluded that even brief self-report measures of antiretroviral adherence can be robust, and recommend items and strategies for HIV research and clinical management.
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Alcohol use and antiretroviral adherence: review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Results support a significant and reliable association of alcohol use and medication nonadherence and Methodological variables seem to moderate this association and could contribute to inconsistent findings across studies.
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Efficacy of interventions in improving highly active antiretroviral therapy adherence and HIV-1 RNA viral load. A meta-analytic review of randomized controlled trials.

TL;DR: Various HAART adherence intervention strategies were shown to be successful, but more research is needed to identify the most efficacious intervention components and the best methods for implementing them in real-world settings with limited resources.

Antiretroviral adherence interventions: a review of current literature and ongoing studies.

TL;DR: The 4 randomized controlled trials conducted with adequate methologic rigor suggest some promising yet preliminary effects of a pharmacist-led individualized intervention, a cognitive-behavioral educational intervention based on self-efficacy theory, and cue-dose training when combined with monetary reinforcement.
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A randomized controlled trial of a peer support intervention targeting antiretroviral medication adherence and depressive symptomatology in HIV-positive men and women.

TL;DR: Null findings may be due to insufficient exposure to the intervention, its low intensity, or the nature of the sample-a heterogeneous HAART-experienced group of patients with high levels of substance use and multiple other competing stressors.