317 results
Search Results
2. Cyclical Longitudinal Ethnography as an Innovative Design for Addressing Sexuality Education in South African Rural Farm Schools.
- Author
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Mavhandu-Mudzusi, Azwihangwisi Helen
- Subjects
SEX education ,RURAL schools ,ETHNOLOGY ,HIV prevention ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Addressing Sexuality Education among learners in rural schools can be challenging when using traditional designs such as ethnography and phenomenology. This paper introduces Cyclical Longitudinal Ethnography as an innovative design for addressing Sexuality Education in South African rural farm schools. This design was developed as part of an engaged scholarship on HIV prevention in rural farm schools in Soutpansberg North Circuit, Limpopo Province, South Africa. The paper provides an overview of Sexuality Education at schools and the challenges thereof. It further provides the basics of ethnography and its limitation. The paper then introduces and describes cyclical ethnography as an alternative to original ethnography. The design allows researchers to still have a prolonged engagement with the community without gross disruption of other academic responsibilities such as tuition, academic citizenship, leadership, and administration. The design allows the researcher to visit the area several times over the years, enabling the researcher to observe variations of a phenomenon over time. The Cyclical nature of the design allows data collection, analysis, intervention, monitoring, and evaluation to be conducted iteratively. Though there are primary key informants, the findings could lead to other key informants, settings, and interventions which were not part of the initial plan and objectives. In this study, the target population was educators teaching Sexuality Education, but it ended up involving learners, parents, and community members. The Longitudinal nature of the design enables the researchers to see the impact of the interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. From training wheels to chemical condoms: Exploring narratives of PrEP discontinuation.
- Author
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Garcia Iglesias, Jaime
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,RISK-taking behavior ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,HEALTH behavior ,GAY men ,SEXUAL health - Abstract
This paper explores experiences of PrEP, a HIV-prevention intervention, among bugchasers, gay men who eroticize HIV. While PrEP has been hailed as a "game changer" in HIV-prevention, little attention has been paid to why and how some people may discontinue it in the face of HIV risk, such as bugchasers do. This paper relies on interview data with bugchasers themselves to discuss the process of discontinuation and its effects. The paper argues that, for these men, discontinuation is a fluid, complex, and sometimes contradictory process. It also describes how participants perceived themselves as being at different stages of discontinuation. The paper also analyzes how these men see PrEP as a barrier to intimacy, risk, and a tool to negotiate their desires and identity: through discontinuing PrEP, these men are able to reflect on and build their identities as bugchasers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. The "3 Ps" of EmPowerment, Partnership and Protection - Stakeholder Perceptions of Beneficial Outcomes of Engagement in HIV Prevention Trials.
- Author
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Wilkinson, Abigail, Thabethe, Siyabonga, Salzwedel, Jessica, and Slack, Catherine
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HIV prevention ,SELF-efficacy ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,THEMATIC analysis ,RESEARCH ethics ,WOMEN'S empowerment - Abstract
Background: Stakeholder engagement is increasingly recognized as a key component of ethical research in leading ethics guidelines. Ethics commentators have also argued that engagement has several beneficial outcomes for the field. Aim: This paper reports on the beneficial outcomes of stakeholder engagement in HIV prevention trials as perceived by stakeholders in the field. Method: We conducted 28 interviews between 2019 and 2021 with interviewees from various stakeholder groups in 12 countries and used thematic analysis to analyze the transcripts. Findings: We found three major themes - namely emPowerment where engagement is perceived to empower stakeholders, Partnerships where engagement is perceived to build equitable relationships and Protections where engagement is perceived to strengthen protections for participants and community stakeholders and to improve science. Conclusions: These findings map closely onto beneficial outcomes envisaged by ethics guidelines, however, the relationship between outcomes seen as beneficial deserves further exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Couple-Based Behavioral HIV Interventions by the Social Intervention Group: Progress, Gaps, and Future Directions.
- Author
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El-Bassel, Nabila, Hunt, Tim, Goddard-Eckrich, Dawn A., Chang, Mingway, McCrimmon, Tara R., Mukherjee, Trena, Remien, Robert H., Terlikbayeva, Assel, Primbetova, Sholpan, Davis, Alissa, Jiwatram-Negrón, Tina, Benjamin, Shoshana N., Witte, Susan S., Wu, Elwin, and Gilbert, Louisa
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,HIV prevention ,HIV infections ,NEEDLE exchange programs ,RISK-taking behavior ,HUMAN sexuality ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,COUPLES therapy ,BEHAVIOR therapy ,MEDICAL screening ,DRUGS ,SEX customs ,PATIENT compliance ,SOCIAL case work - Abstract
Purpose: This paper reports a review of couple-based behavioral HIV interventions conducted by the Social Intervention Group (SIG); and addresses gaps, future directions, and implications for couple-based HIV interventions. Method: We performed a literature review for SIG research on intervention and prevention studies involving couples/partners. Results: We identified nine couple-based interventions. Outcomes included reduced sexual and substance use-related risk behaviors and improved use of anti-retroviral treatment. We conducted these studies in diverse venues, including needle/syringe exchange programs, primary care clinics, and criminal justice settings. Conclusions: The findings of this review provide strong evidence for the efficacy of couple-based HIV interventions in reducing sexual HIV risks and linkage to HIV and substance-use treatment. SIG has advanced couple-based HIV intervention research science by improving study design, intervention core components, conceptual models, and implementation strategies; which have informed scientific directions and transformed couple-based HIV prevention research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Intervening on the Intersecting Issues of Intimate Partner Violence, Substance Use, and HIV: A Review of Social Intervention Group's (SIG) Syndemic-Focused Interventions for Women.
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Gilbert, Louisa, Stoicescu, Claudia, Goddard-Eckrich, Dawn, Dasgupta, Anindita, Richer, Ariel, N. Benjamin, Shoshana, Wu, Elwin, and El-Bassel, Nabila
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SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,HIV prevention ,VIOLENCE prevention ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,EVALUATION of medical care ,COMMUNITY services ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,PATIENT participation ,SOCIAL theory ,WOMEN ,INTIMATE partner violence ,GENDER ,SOCIAL services ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Intimate partner violence (IPV), HIV, and substance use are serious intersecting public health issues. This paper aims to describe the Social Intervention Group (SIG)'s syndemic-focused interventions for women that address the co-occurrence of IPV, HIV, and substance use, referred to as the SAVA syndemic. We reviewed SIG intervention studies from 2000 to 2020 that evaluated the effectiveness of syndemic-focused interventions which addressed two or more outcomes related to reducing IPV, HIV, and substance use among different populations of women who use drugs. This review identified five interventions that co-targeted SAVA outcomes. Of the five interventions, four showed a significant reduction in risks for two or more outcomes related to IPV, substance use, and HIV. The significant effects of SIG's interventions on IPV, substance use, and HIV outcomes among different populations of women demonstrate the potential of using syndemic theory and methods in guiding effective SAVA-focused interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. Combination Microfinance and HIV Risk Reduction Among Women Engaged in Sex Work.
- Author
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Witte, Susan S., Yang, Lyla Sunyoung, McCrimmon, Tara, Aira, Toivgoo, Batsukh, Altantsetseg, Terlikbayeva, Assel, Primbetova, Sholpan, Mergenova, Gaukhar, Cordisco Tsai, Laura, Carlson, Cady, Vélez-Grau, Carolina, Ssewamala, Fred, and El-Bassel, Nabila
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,HIV infection risk factors ,VIOLENCE prevention ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,SOCIAL support ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,WOMEN'S rights ,SEX work ,WOMEN ,MENTAL health ,PREVENTIVE health services ,RISK assessment ,SELF-efficacy ,DISEASE susceptibility ,HEALTH ,SOCIAL work research ,ENDOWMENTS ,MEDICALLY underserved areas ,SOCIAL services ,DRUG abusers - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to summarize 15 years of intervention science in combination HIV prevention and microfinance among women engaged in sex work (WESW) in Central Asia, identifying gaps in our understanding and recommendations for future studies. We begin by describing the emergence of HIV/STI risk among WESW in the Central Asia region, specifically Mongolia and Kazakhstan, and bridge to the formative stages of our methodology as well as completed prevention intervention studies. We describe the development of combining HIV prevention with asset-based microfinance interventions, lessons learned, and contributions these studies make to HIV prevention, intervention science, and practice. We end by recommending next steps to move prevention science forward in this area and among this key population, which continues to be underserved in HIV prevention science worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Barriers and Facilitators to the Collection and Aggregation of Electronic Health Record HIV Data: An Analysis of Study Recruitment Venues Within the Adolescent Medicine Trials Network for HIV/AIDS Interventions (ATN).
- Author
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Butame, Seyram A., De Leon, Jessica M., Lee, Sung-Jae, Naar, Sylvie, Genn, Leah, Dark, Tyra, and Kapogiannis, Bill G.
- Abstract
Electronic health record (EHR) data can be leveraged for prospective cohort studies and pragmatic clinical trials, targeting youth living with HIV (YLH). Using EHRs in this manner may minimize the need for costly research infrastructure in service to lowering disease burden. This study characterizes HIV prevention and care continua variables and identifies factors likely to impede or facilitate EHR use for research and interventions. We conducted telephone-based qualitative interviews with National Experts (n = 10) and Key Stakeholders (n = 19) from subject recruitment venues (SRVs), providing care services to YLH and youth at risk for HIV. We found 17 different EHR systems being used for various purposes (e.g., workflow management and billing). Thematic content analysis of interviews highlighted six broad categories of perspectives on barriers to and facilitators of EHR use: specific variable collection, general use barriers, and facilitators, general data collection barriers and facilitators, EHRs for surveillance and research, EHRs for personnel and resource management and capture of HIV specific variables. These findings may inform implementation strategies of future studies, in which we conduct routine monitoring of the youth HIV prevention and care continua using EHRs and test an eHealth intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. From HIV prevention to HIV protection: addressing the vulnerability of girls and young women in urban areas.
- Author
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Mabala, Richard
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METHODOLOGY ,HIV infections ,HIV prevention ,CITIES & towns ,EPIDEMICS ,SOCIAL context ,SOCIAL cohesion ,POVERTY - Abstract
Copyright of Environment & Urbanization is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2006
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10. Statistical methods for the analysis of clinical trials data containing many zeros: An application in vaccine development.
- Author
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Callegaro, Andrea, Kassapian, Marie, Zahaf, Toufik, and Tibaldi, Fabián
- Subjects
VACCINES ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,HERPES zoster vaccines ,VACCINE effectiveness ,SELECTION bias (Statistics) ,STATISTICS ,HIV prevention ,HIV infection transmission ,MALARIA prevention ,HERPES zoster prevention ,HERPES zoster complications ,AIDS vaccines ,CLINICAL trials ,ECONOMIC aspects of diseases ,HERPES zoster ,HIV infections ,MALARIA ,RESEARCH bias - Abstract
In recent years, many vaccines have been developed for the prevention of a variety of diseases. Many of these vaccines, like the one for herpes zoster, are supposed to act in a multilevel way. Ideally, they completely prevent expression of the virus, but failing that they help to reduce the severity of the disease. A simple approach to analyze these data is the so-called burden-of-illness test. The method assigns a score, say W, equal to 0 for the uninfected and a post-infection outcome X > 0 for the infected individuals. One of the limitations of this test is the potential low power when the vaccine efficacy is close to 0. To overcome this limitation, we propose a Fisher adjusted test where we combine a statistic for infection with a statistic for post-infection outcome adjusted for selection bias. The advantages and disadvantages of different methods proposed in the literature are discussed. We compared the methods via simulations in herpes zoster, HIV, and malaria vaccine trial settings. In addition, we applied these methods to published data on HIV vaccine. The paper ends with some recommendations and conclusions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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11. Methods for comparing durability of immune responses between vaccine regimens in early-phase trials.
- Author
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Westling, Ted, Juraska, Michal, Seaton, Kelly E., Tomaras, Georgia D., Gilbert, Peter B., and Janes, Holly
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VACCINE effectiveness ,IMMUNE response ,VACCINES ,AIDS vaccines ,DURABILITY ,INFERENTIAL statistics ,HIV prevention ,STATISTICS ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,CLINICAL trials ,DATA analysis - Abstract
The ability to produce a long-lasting, or durable, immune response is a crucial characteristic of many highly effective vaccines. A goal of early-phase vaccine trials is often to compare the immune response durability of multiple tested vaccine regimens. One parameter for measuring immune response durability is the area under the mean post-peak log immune response profile. In this paper, we compare immune response durability across vaccine regimens within and between two phase I trials of DNA-primed HIV vaccine regimens, HVTN 094 and HVTN 096. We compare four estimators of this durability parameter and the resulting statistical inferences for comparing vaccine regimens. Two of these estimators use the trapezoid rule as an empirical approximation of the area under the marginal log response curve, and the other two estimators are based on linear and nonlinear models for the marginal mean log response. We conduct a simulation study to compare the four estimators, provide guidance on estimator selection, and use the nonlinear marginal mean model to analyze immunogenicity data from the two HIV vaccine trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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12. Depression symptoms, social support and overall health among HIV-positive individuals in Kenya.
- Author
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Kingori, Caroline, Haile, Zelalem T, and Ngatia, Peter
- Subjects
HIV-positive persons ,MENTAL depression ,SOCIAL support ,HIV prevention ,AIDS prevention ,PUBLIC health ,QUALITY of life ,HEALTH ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In Kenya, there was a reported decline in HIV incidence and prevalence among those aged 15 to 64 years and children. Despite the decline, closer assessment of psychosocial issues like depression, contextual factors (family and community), and social support is necessary given the likely impact on overall health and HIV prevention. This paper examines an association between symptoms of depression and social support on overall health among HIV-positive participants recruited from an HIV clinic in Kenya. Descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses were utilized. Findings reveal that compared to those with minimal depression (referent category) participants with mild, moderate, moderately severe/severe depression had higher odds of having poor health. For social support, compared with participants with no social support (referent category), participants with high social support had lower odds of having poor overall health in both unadjusted and multivariable-adjusted models. In conclusion, this study suggests that HIV clinics and interventions need to focus more on the psychological and/or mental health status of HIV-infected individuals while providing avenues such as social support groups that can be a buffer against the negative impact of HIV infection and depression on overall health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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13. Agent-based model for social and sexual partnerships formation.
- Author
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Mudimu, Edinah and Engelbrecht, Gerhard Nieuwoudt
- Subjects
MULTIAGENT systems ,HIV prevention ,SOCIAL interaction ,SEXUAL partners ,SOCIAL networks ,COURTSHIP - Abstract
This paper presents an agent-based model that aims to replicate the social and sexual partnerships in real-world settings. This work is part of work in progress and aims to model the progression of HIV in a community. The model builds on existing models allowing for marriage, divorce and agent death. The main aim of this paper is to enhance the understanding of the evolution of social and sexual partnerships in a dynamically changing agent population. Agents are assigned attributes such as attractiveness, aspiration, courtship duration and sexual drive. Partnership formation is based on a likeability index which is calculated using age, aspiration and attractiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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14. Aspirations and contradictions: The role of public libraries in the fight against HIV/AIDS in developing countries, with special reference to Swaziland.
- Author
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Nassimbeni, Mary and Shabangu, Joy
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PUBLIC libraries -- Social aspects ,LIBRARIES & community ,AIDS education ,HIV prevention ,SOCIAL conditions of developing countries - Abstract
This paper presents findings from a study conducted in Swaziland on the role of the public library in the provision of HIV and AIDS information. Its findings resonate with the findings of other studies carried out in a number of public libraries in African countries, viz. the disappointingly low visibility of the efforts to intervene, and the failure of the librarians to leverage greater impact through partnerships with related agencies. It suggests that public libraries need to change their behaviour in order to resolve the disparity between espoused positions and actual impact. The paper concludes by giving an account of how an information centre was established in a rural area in response to the findings of the investigation which pointed out the disadvantages experienced by rural people as a result of the inefficacy of the information flows between the centre and the margins. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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15. Unsafe injecting practices, sexual risk behaviours and determinants of HIV among men who inject drugs: Results from Integrated Biological and Behavioural Surveillance in India.
- Author
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Kumar, Pradeep, Sangal, Bhavna, Ramanathan, Shreena, Ammassari, Savina, and Venkatesh, Srinivasa Raghavan
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HIV infection risk factors ,DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections ,HIV prevention ,INJECTIONS ,HIV-positive men ,HIV status ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of drug abuse? ,HIV infections & psychology ,SEXUALLY transmitted disease diagnosis ,PREVENTION of sexually transmitted diseases ,EPIDEMIOLOGY of sexually transmitted diseases ,HIV infection epidemiology ,INTRAVENOUS drug abuse ,NEEDLE sharing ,RISK-taking behavior ,HUMAN sexuality ,SEXUALLY transmitted diseases ,DISEASE prevalence ,CROSS-sectional method ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
In India, while an overall reduction in HIV is achieved among most key populations, the continued higher prevalence among people who inject drugs (PWIDs) is an area of concern. This paper analyses unsafe injecting and sexual risk behaviours in male PWIDs according to HIV status and also examines the determinants of HIV infection in this high-risk group. Data from India's Integrated Biological and Behavioural Surveillance, conducted across 29 Indian states and Union Territories among 19,902 male PWIDs, were used. Informed consent was obtained and men aged 15 years or more, who used psychotropic substances or drugs in the past three months for non-medical reasons were recruited for the survey. Results from the multivariable analysis suggest that drug use debut at age 25 years or above (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]: 1.41, confidence interval [CI]: 1.05-1.88), engagement in drug use for a longer duration (AOR: 1.81, CI: 1.32-2.48), injecting three times or more per day (AOR: 1.53, CI: 1.1-2.12), sharing of needle/syringes (AOR: 1.34, CI: 1.02-1.76), self-reported sexually transmitted infections (AOR: 1.55, CI: 1.12-2.14) and higher self-risk perception for exposure to HIV (AOR: 2.08, CI: 1.58-2.75) increase the likelihood of HIV infection. Sustained higher prevalence, unsafe injecting and risky sexual practices are major challenges which may prevent India from reaching the 'end of AIDS' by 2030. This underscores the need for adoption of a tailored, evidence-driven HIV prevention approach that adequately addresses local needs to limit the spread of HIV within this population, and thereby prevents the onward transmission of HIV to the general population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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16. Treasure (Hunt for) Your Health! Addressing Pediatric Social Determinants of Health Through Child-Friendly Community Engagement Events.
- Author
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McGrath, Eric, Dwaihy, Meghan, Smitherman, Lynn, Behar, Miriam, Benjamins, Laura, Cockern, Nikki, Meade, Jill, Smith, Jameel, Marshall, Sharon, Youngman, Christopher, Buggs-Saxton, Colleen, Houston, Keshaum, Jones, Natalie, and Secord, Elizabeth
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,CHILDREN'S health ,HEALTH services accessibility ,IMMUNIZATION ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,CLOTHING & dress ,MENTAL health ,PRIMARY health care ,FOOD security ,HEALTH fairs ,CHILD development ,HEALTH promotion ,LITERACY ,NUTRITION ,ADOLESCENCE ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Social determinants of health (SDoH), including factors such as education level, housing, poverty, racism, and food insecurity and their impact on health outcomes have been well documented. The "Wayne Pediatrics Health and Nutrition Expo" held at Detroit's Eastern Market was an activity-based health and nutrition event addressing pediatric SDoH. Partnering with community organizations, the event had 10 stations addressing SDoH: access to a primary-care pediatrician; HIV-care and prevention; childhood literacy; clothing & winter coats; mental health and childhood development; nutrition; staying active; vaccination; and food insecurity. The free, public event featured a child-themed treasure hunt and map, music, giveaways, and live demonstrations, all in a family-friendly park atmosphere. While SDoH are considered "non-medical" factors that contribute to health and may be difficult to completely address for any individual child, our practice addressed several key SDoH at a single-day, hands-on, child-friendly community event based on the local needs of children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Transfiguring Relations Theorizing Political Change in the Everyday.
- Author
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Stephenson, Niamh and Kippax, Susan
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SOCIAL action ,SOCIAL problems ,RECOGNITION (Psychology) ,POLITICAL change ,POLITICAL psychology ,EVERYDAY life - Abstract
What is the relationship between social action initiatives and theory? In this paper we suggest that, like social action, theory is a means of intervening in social problems and is integrally linked with future possibilities. Devising the means of effective intervention requires the ability to understand and harness people's ways of actively striving to deal with the social problems which emerge in their everyday lives. Such efforts involve communicating across difference. For example, regarding the problems of HIV prevention and positive living, gay men in Sydney are positioned differently from each other in relation to the virus, sexual practice, understanding and use of biomedical developments in the development of safe-sex strategies. How do everyday struggles to communicate across difference feed into effective social action, and what is the role of theory in supporting and driving these efforts? In this paper we consider the limitations of notions of intersubjectivity which overemphasize the role of ‘mutual recognition’ in the development of relationships between actors. Talk of ‘mutual recognition’ overlooks the fact that communication is essentially ambiguous. The result is a failure to theorize the emergence of productive connections between people which work through openness to this ambiguity. The absence of recognition can give rise to confusion, but it also an important element in the development of new ways of connecting with others. In turn, the mechanisms of socio-political change can be affected through the development of new forms of connection between actors. That is, modes of intersubjectivity which are based on misrecognition and difference can function as transfiguring relations, opening new possibilities for actively tackling social problems. We argue that effective social action harnesses transfiguring relations. This approach to social action demands that we develop our understanding of social relations, and take account of the productive role of misrecognition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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18. Ability of a rapid HIV testing site to attract and test vulnerable populations: a cross-sectional study on Actuel sur Rue.
- Author
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Engler, Kim, Rollet, Kathleen, Lessard, David, Thomas, Réjean, and Lebouché, Bertrand
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MEN who have sex with men ,DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections ,HIV prevention ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DISEASES ,HIV infection epidemiology ,COMMUNITY health services administration ,HEALTH attitudes ,HETEROSEXUALITY ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,MEDICAL screening ,RISK-taking behavior ,HUMAN sexuality ,PILOT projects ,AT-risk people ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Quebec's HIV epidemic persists, particularly among men who have sex with men (MSM) and in Montreal. Increasing access to HIV testing is necessary and community-based rapid testing offers one strategy. This paper examines the clienteles and activities of a rapid HIV testing site in Montreal, the pilot project Actuel sur Rue. Comparative analyses were conducted with 1357 MSM, 147 heterosexual men and 64 women who visited Actuel sur Rue between July 2012 and November 2013 on socio-demographics, health, drug use, sexual practices/infection and HIV testing/prevention. Significant group differences were observed in each category. Actuel sur Rue received 1901 clients, conducted 1417 rapid HIV tests and tested 77 never-tested individuals. Rapid testing produced a high reactive rate (2%). Only 1/28 of those with reactive tests had no previous HIV testing, and 36% had used post-exposure prophylaxis, suggesting missed opportunities for prevention. Findings highlight diverse client vulnerability profiles and the relevance of checkpoints and further prevention efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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19. The utility of population-based surveys to describe the continuum of HIV services for key and general populations.
- Author
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Hladik, Wolfgang, Benech, Irene, Bateganya, Moses, and Hakim, Avi J.
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HIV infections ,THERAPEUTICS ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,HIV prevention ,PATIENT monitoring ,VIRAL load ,CONTINUUM of care ,T cells ,ANTI-HIV agents ,CD4 lymphocyte count - Abstract
Monitoring the cascade or continuum of HIV services - ranging from outreach services to anti-retroviral treatment - has become increasingly important as the focus in prevention moves toward biomedical interventions, in particular, 'Treatment as Prevention.' The HIV continuum typically utilises clinic-based care and treatment monitoring data and helps identify gaps and inform programme improvements. This paper discusses the merits of a population-based survey-informed continuum of services. Surveys provide individual-level, population-based data by sampling persons both in and outside the continuum, which facilitate the estimation of population fractions, such as the proportion of people living with HIV in care, as well as the examination of determinants for being in or outside the continuum. Survey-informed cascades of services may especially benefit key populations at increased risk for HIV infection for who social marginalisation, criminalisation, and stigma result in barriers to access and retention in services, a low social visibility, mobility, and outreach-based services can compromise clinic-based monitoring. Adding CD4+ T-cell count and viral load measurements to such surveys may provide population-level information on viral load suppression, stage of disease, treatment needs, and population-level transmission potential. While routine clinic-based reporting will remain the mainstay of monitoring, a survey-informed service cascade can address some of its limitations and offer additional insights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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20. Implementing a Surveillance-Based Approach to Create a Statewide Viral Clearance Cascade for Hepatitis C Among People With HIV and HCV Coinfection in Connecticut.
- Author
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Wegener, Maximilian, Brooks, Ralph, Speers, Suzanne, Nichols, Lisa, and Villanueva, Merceditas
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HEPATITIS C prevention ,HIV prevention ,HEPATITIS C diagnosis ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,HIV-positive persons ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,VIRAL load ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL screening ,MIXED infections ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Objectives: Highly effective direct-acting antiviral medications have made it feasible to achieve elimination of hepatis C virus (HCV), including for people with HIV and HCV coinfection. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention offers guidance for a laboratory surveillance–based HCV viral clearance cascade, which allows public health departments to track the outcomes of people with HCV based on the following steps: ever infected, virally tested, initial infection, and cured or cleared. We examined the feasibility of this approach among people with HIV and HCV coinfection in Connecticut. Methods: We matched an HIV surveillance database, which included cases from the enhanced HIV/AIDS Reporting System as of December 31, 2019, and the HCV surveillance database, the Connecticut Electronic Disease Surveillance System, to define a cohort of coinfected people. We used HCV laboratory results obtained from January 1, 2016, through August 3, 2020, to determine HCV status. Results: Of 1361 people who were ever infected with HCV as of December 31, 2019, 1256 (92.3%) received HCV viral testing, 865 of 1256 people tested (68.9%) were HCV infected, and 336 of 865 infected people (38.8%) were cleared or cured. People who had undetectable HIV viral loads at most recent HIV test (<200 copies/mL) were more likely than those with detectable HIV viral loads to achieve HCV cure (P =.02). Conclusions: A surveillance-based approach that includes data based on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention HCV viral clearance cascade is feasible to implement, can help track population-level outcomes longitudinally, and can help identify gaps to inform HCV elimination strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Advancing HIV/AIDS Combination Prevention through mass media: a review of practices in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Bekalu, Mesfin Awoke and Eggermont, Steven
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AIDS ,HIV prevention ,MASS media research ,INTERVENTION (Social services) ,HEALTH in mass media ,PREVENTION - Abstract
This paper presents an assessment of the literature on the use of mass media campaigns to advance biomedical, structural and behavioural approaches to HIV/AIDS prevention in sub-Saharan Africa over the past decade (2000–2010). Studies on the use of mass media in HIV/AIDS prevention efforts were searched from two main electronic databases – Web of Science and PubMed. Studies meeting selection criteria were examined for the themes of the mass media programs studied in a content analytic approach. The findings suggest that while there are several biomedical and structural issues which the mass media could well have been instrumental for, their utilization in sub-Saharan Africa seems to be limited to behavioural interventions. It is concluded that at a time when recommendations for Combination Prevention are prevailing, the utilization of the mass media largely limited to a certain domain of HIV/AIDS prevention appears to be worthy of attention. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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22. SOCIAL SUPPORT AS A PREDICTOR OF HIV TESTING IN AT-RISK POPULATIONS: A RESEARCH NOTE.
- Author
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Grosso, Ashley
- Subjects
SOCIAL support ,SOCIAL capital ,HIV prevention ,PUBLIC health ,AIDS ,SOCIAL networks ,PUBLIC welfare ,NETWORK effect - Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between social support and the probability of getting tested for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) among at-risk adults in the United States. According to the literature, social support is one mechanism through which social capital is purported to work. Several studies have hypothesized that social capital influences public health, including HIV or Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) case rates and behaviors related to contracting HIV. In this analysis, I use social support as an individual level measure of social capital and examine its influence on a protective behavior, getting tested for HIV. The relationship of social capital and social support to behaviors related to HIV is relevant to the design and implementation of HIV prevention programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Does bar-based, peer-led sexual health promotion have a community-level effect amongst gay men in Scotland?
- Author
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Flowers, P., Hart, G. J., Williamson, L. M., Frankis, J. S., and Der, G. J.
- Subjects
GAY men ,HEALTH promotion ,SEX customs ,ANAL sex ,SEX surrogates ,HEPATITIS B vaccines ,HIV prevention ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,COMMUNITY health services ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ALCOHOL drinking ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,SEX education ,AFFINITY groups ,EVALUATION research ,HELPLINES ,RELATIVE medical risk ,EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
This paper evaluates the effectiveness of a bar-based, peer-led community-level intervention to promote sexual health amongst gay men. The intervention consisted of peer education within bars, gay specific genitourinary medicine (GUM) services and a free-phone hotline. Data were collected at baseline (1996) and at follow-up (1999) in gay bars in Glasgow (intervention city) and Edinburgh (control city). During the intervention peer educators interacted with 1484 men and new clients increased at the gay specific GUM service. However, the hotline was under-utilized and abused. The outcome measures were: reported hepatitis B vaccination; HIV testing; unprotected anal intercourse (UAI) with casual partners; negotiated safety; and amongst men reporting UAI with a regular partner, the proportion who knew their own and their partner's HIV status. Significant differences in sexual health behaviours were observed across locations and across time, but the only significant intervention effects were amongst men who had direct contact with the intervention, with higher uptake of hepatitis B vaccination and HIV testing. The intervention did not produce community-wide changes in sexual health behaviours. These results question the replication and transferability of peer-led, community-level sexual health promotion for gay men outwith the USA and across time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Exploring Barriers and Facilitators That Influence Uptake of Oral Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Among Men Who Have Sex With Men in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe: Key Stakeholder's Perspectives.
- Author
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Moyo, Perez Livias and Nunu, Wilfred Njabulo
- Subjects
PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,HEALTH facilities ,MEDICAL personnel ,HIV infections ,HIV prevention - Abstract
The world has been on the path to ending HIV and AIDS as a global threat by 2030; despite these efforts, the rate of new HIV infections among men who have sex with men remains very high. This study sought to explore the perceptions of key stakeholders on the potential barriers and facilitators of pre-exposure prophylaxis use among this key population. An exploratory, descriptive (through interviews) qualitative study was conducted on 10 key informants who were purposively selected and snowballed based on their knowledge and experience toward preexposure prophylaxis programming among men who have sex with men. The interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim, coded, and thematically analyzed on MAXQDA. Stated barriers were stigma, lack of information, wrong messaging around pre-exposure prophylaxis, hearing negative things about the pills, the burden of taking pills daily, negative attitudes from health care providers, non-friendly health care facilities, pre-exposure prophylaxis not being affordable, and lack of flexibility and privacy from public hospitals. Identified facilitators were correct messaging on preexposure prophylaxis, long-lasting injectable pre-exposure prophylaxis, improved packaging, de-stigmatization, more friendly facilities, differentiated service approach, community groups, engagement, and partnership. To address these barriers and leverage the facilitators, it is imperative to have accessible, affordable services, non-judgmental health care providers, and peer support networks to empower men who have sex with men to make informed decisions regarding their sexual and reproductive health. Continued efforts to remove barriers and promote facilitators are crucial for maximizing the potential of pre-exposure prophylaxis as an effective HIV prevention tool among this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. As Much As I Can – Utilizing Immersive Theatre to Reduce HIV-Related Stigma and Discrimination Toward Black Sexual Minority Men.
- Author
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Burns, Paul A., Klukas, Emily, Sims-Gomillia, Courtney, Omondi, Angela, Bender, Melverta, and Poteat, Tonia
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of Black people ,SEXUAL orientation ,AIDS education ,PSYCHOLOGY of men ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,TEACHING methods ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,CROSS-sectional method ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SOCIAL stigma ,FISHER exact test ,HELP-seeking behavior ,SURVEYS ,T-test (Statistics) ,SEXUAL minorities ,ART therapy ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,ODDS ratio ,PSYCHOLOGY of HIV-positive persons ,PERFORMING arts ,GAY men - Abstract
Background: Despite advances in biomedical HIV prevention modalities such as pre-exposure prophylaxis to prevent the transmission of HIV, racial/ethnic and sexual/gender minority populations are disproportionately impacted by HIV epidemic. Alarming rates of HIV have persisted among Black gay and bisexual men, particularly in Southern states. Methods: Utilizing data from the ViiV ACCELERATE! initiative, we explored the impact of As Much As I Can, an immersive theatre production, on HIV-related stigma behaviors. A self-administered post-performance survey was conducted with a cohort (n = 322) of randomly selected audience members. Results: Overall, the results showed participants had a highly favorable experience, rating the performance with a mean score of 9.77/10. Respondents indicated they intended to change behaviors to promote HIV prevention education and to reduce stigma and discrimination including: (1) Say something if I hear stigmatizing language against people living with HIV (75.4%), (2) Say something if I hear anti-gay language (69.7%) and (3) Tell others about HIV prevention options (e.g., PrEP, PEP, condoms (64.1%). The findings show there is an association between HIV-related behavior intention and linkage to HIV care. Respondents who reported they were more likely to say something about HIV stigma were almost three times (O.R. 2.77; 95% C.I. 0.98–7.8) more likely to indicate they would follow up with a healthcare professional. Conclusions: This study suggests that immersive theatre is an effective method for communicating HIV prevention education and reducing HIV-related structural stigma and discrimination that increases HIV vulnerability for Black sexual minority men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Recommendations for Improving Oral Pre-exposure Prophylaxis Implementation and Social Marketing in Ugandan Fisherfolk Communities: A Qualitative Exploration.
- Author
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Bogart, Laura M, Musoke, William, Mayatsa, Jimmy, Marsh, Terry, Naigino, Rose, Banegura, Anchilla, Mukama, Christopher Semei, Allupo, Stella, Odiit, Mary, Kadama, Herbert, Mukasa, Barbara, and Wanyenze, Rhoda K
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,RESEARCH ,SOCIAL marketing ,HEALTH services accessibility ,CROSS-sectional method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL screening ,INTERVIEWING ,SOCIAL stigma ,FAMILY conflict ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,HUMAN services programs ,FISHING ,QUALITATIVE research ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,POPULATION health ,POVERTY ,TRANSPORTATION - Abstract
Background: HIV is hyperendemic among fisherfolk in Sub-Saharan Africa, especially around Lake Victoria, Uganda. Purpose/Research Design: We conducted cross-sectional semi-structured interviews about oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) implementation with 35 Ugandan fisherfolk (15 women, 20 men) and 10 key stakeholders (healthcare providers, policymakers, community leaders). We used a directed content analysis approach based on implementation science and social marketing frameworks. Results: Participants showed high acceptability for PrEP. Anticipated barriers among fisherfolk included stigma (due to similar medications/packaging as HIV treatment); misconceptions; mobility, competing needs, poverty, and partner conflict. Anticipated provider barriers included insufficient staffing and travel support. Recommendations included: change PrEP packaging; integrate PrEP with other services; decrease PrEP refill frequency; give transportation resources to providers; train more healthcare workers to provide PrEP to fisherfolk; and use positively framed messages to promote PrEP. Conclusions: Results can inform policymakers and healthcare organizations on how to overcome barriers to PrEP scale-up in most at-risk populations with poor healthcare access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Gender-Based Violence Interventions in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review of Interventions at Structural, Community, Interpersonal, Individual, and Multiple Levels.
- Author
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Sabri, Bushra, Sellke, Robert, Smudde, Michelle, Bourey, Christina, and Murray, Sarah McIvor
- Subjects
PREVENTION of sexually transmitted diseases ,HIV prevention ,ONLINE information services ,CINAHL database ,MEDICAL databases ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,HEALTH education ,MIDDLE-income countries ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,VIOLENCE ,COMMUNITY support ,PSYCHOEDUCATION ,GENDER ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,ABILITY ,TRAINING ,LOW-income countries ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDLINE ,VICTIMS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Gender-based violence (GBV) disproportionately impacts women and girls in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). This review described the characteristics of structural, community, interpersonal, individual, and multilevel GBV interventions in LMIC and examined components of interventions implemented at different socio-ecological levels. We conducted a systematic search of peer-reviewed literature on GBV intervention evaluation studies in LMIC using the following databases: PubMed, CINAHL, Embase, Cochrane, Academic Search Ultimate, PsycInfo, and Web of Science. The search resulted in 3,256 articles, with 60 articles meeting the eligibility criteria. Thirty-eight articles reported positive GBV outcomes with significant differences between intervention and control arms on at least one GBV outcome. Very few interventions were found to be stand-alone GBV interventions. The key components of interventions effective in addressing victimization and perpetration across levels were education or psychoeducation, psychotherapy, skills development, gender transformative activities, community engagement, focus on men and/or partners, and health promotion activities such as HIV or STI prevention. Most interventions were multilevel, with positive outcomes for victimization. Fewer evidence-based interventions existed for addressing perpetration. There is need for additional research using rigorous methods to establish an evidence base for effective interventions in under-researched regions in LMIC as well as for interventions that address perpetration of GBV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Taking the Sexy Health Carnival across Turtle Island.
- Author
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Monchalin, Renée, Lesperance, Alexa, Flicker, Sarah, Forrest, Shane, Allan, Emma A, and Xavier, Chloé G
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS youth ,HIV prevention ,CARNIVAL ,CARNIVALS ,SEXUAL health - Abstract
This article describes a peer-led intervention called the Sexy Health Carnival (SHC) that takes a strengths-based approach to promoting Indigenous youth sexual health in a culturally safe context. Expanding on an Ontario pilot study, a group of Indigenous youth leaders went to 11 Indigenous gatherings across Turtle Island, also known as North America, from 2017 to 2020 where they administered an offline iPad survey to 150 Indigenous youth (aged 16–25 years) who engaged with the SHC. The survey gathered descriptive data on HIV prevention behaviors and intentions, and the acceptability of the SHC approach within Indigenous community gatherings. Results demonstrate that doing Indigenous peer-led sexual health and HIV outreach through the SHC is well received among Indigenous youth. Indigenous youth are capable of reaching their peers and developing successful sexual health outreach and HIV prevention resources for each other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. TRAINING IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION ON RAPID ASSESSMENT AND RESPONSE TO HIV/AIDS AMONG INJECTING DRUG USERS.
- Author
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Burrows, Dave, Trautmann, Franz, Bijl, Murdo, and Sarankov, Yuri
- Subjects
- *
HIV prevention , *INTRAVENOUS drug abusers , *TRAINING , *DRUG abusers - Abstract
HIV is spreading quickly in several parts of the Russian Federation (RF), particularly among injecting drug users (IDUs). Prevention programs have been established in several Russian cities to address these epidemics. Many more cities and regions need to respond quickly to the threat or occurrence of HIV spreading among IDUs. This paper describes the HIV situation and current response to HIV among IDUs in the RF, as well as describing the design, implementation and processes of the first year of a training program to assist health professionals and others to respond to the developing crisis. The discussion section of the paper centers on four broad themes that have emerged while implementing the training program and the methods the authors have developed in the training program to take account of these issues: the Russian Federation as "different" from other countries; local ways of making and using drugs; logistics in the Russian environment; and secrecy and competition. It concludes that this training program may be considered by other countries in Central and Eastern Europe and elsewhere as an effective way to respond to HIV epidemics among IDUs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. HIV prevention and the positive population.
- Author
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King-Spooner, S.
- Subjects
HIV ,HIV-positive persons ,HIV prevention ,EPIDEMICS ,HIV infections ,ALTRUISM - Abstract
Efforts to prevent the spread of HIV have, to an overwhelming degree, addressed themselves to the HIV-negative rather than to the positive population. But it makes sense to direct more preventive work towards positive individuals, for 3 reasons. First, because changes in the behaviour of positive people have a disproportionately greater effect on the spread of the epidemic--so positive-targeted interventions are potentially more cost-effective, and in many cases enormously so. Second, positive individuals already show a degree of preventive altruism that generally outweighs the self-protective efforts of those who are negative. And third, there is reason to believe that this preventive altruism can be strengthened by appropriate interventions. Some of the practical implications of a shift to greater positive targeting, involving both novel interventions and modified familiar ones, can be sketched out. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The British Association for Sexual Health and HIV 2016 UK national audit and survey of clinic policies in relation to risk assessment, HIV testing and follow-up.
- Author
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Bhaduri, S., Curtis, H., McClean, H., Sullivan, A. K., and National Audit Group of the British Association for Sexual Health and HIV
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of HIV infections ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,HEALTH risk assessment ,HIV infection risk factors ,MEDICAL audit ,SEXUAL health ,MEN who have sex with men ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of drug abuse? ,HIV prevention ,AUDITING ,CLINICS ,DRUGS of abuse ,HOMOSEXUALITY ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL protocols ,RISK assessment ,REPRODUCTIVE health - Abstract
This national audit of 142 clinics demonstrated that the majority of clinics surveyed had policies and agreed clinical practice for alcohol and recreational drug enquiry, as well as documentation of HIV test refusal, although this was not the case in 24% of clinics as regards alcohol usage, 21% of clinics as regards recreational drugs use and 43% of clinics as regards chemsex usage. Regarding management of HIV test refusal, there was no policy or agreed practice in 13% of clinics with respect to men having sex with men (MSM) attenders, and in 18% of clinics for heterosexual attenders. Seventy percent of clinics had HIV point of care tests (POCT) available. Recommendations include: all clinics should have a policy of routine enquiry about alcohol, recreational drugs and chemsex, all clinics should record reasons for HIV test refusal and all clinics should provide testing alternatives to improve uptake, e.g. point of care testing or home sampling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Heterosexual gonorrhoea at St Thomas'--I: Patient characteristics and implications for targeted STD and HIV prevention strategies.
- Author
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Daker-White, G. and Barlow, D.
- Subjects
GONORRHEA ,PREVENTION of sexually transmitted diseases ,SOCIAL epidemiology ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,PUBLIC health ,HIV prevention ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,HUMAN sexuality ,EVALUATION research ,CASE-control method - Abstract
This paper compares the socio-demographic characteristics of patients with gonorrhoea with a control group of other attendees to an inner-London genitourinary medicine (GUM) clinic. Between 16 May and 21 December 1994 inclusive there were 312 culture-confirmed heterosexually-acquired cases of Neisseria gonorrheae treated in our clinic: 192 (61.54%) men and 120 (38.46%) women. There were significant differences between the population of cases and controls. Both male (z = -5.36, P < 0.001) and female (z = -6.6, P < 0.001) cases were younger than controls. Cases were more likely to be black African-Caribbean than were controls and these differences were more marked in men (chi 2 = 47.85, P < 0.001). Cases were also more likely to reside in south London postal districts than were controls (chi 2 = 24.98, P < 0.001). The implications of these findings for targeted health interventions are discussed and we suggest avenues for further work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. HIV testing during pregnancy among women with a recent live birth—Seven US States, 2016–2019.
- Author
-
Nwangwu-Ike, Ndidi, Kapaya, Martha, Oladapo, Keydra, and DAngelo, Denise V
- Subjects
PREVENTION of infectious disease transmission ,HIV prevention ,HIV infections ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,MEDICAL screening ,MARITAL status ,PRENATAL care ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,INSURANCE ,PREGNANCY - Abstract
Background: Although the United States has made progress in reducing the transmission of HIV from mother-to-child, it has not yet met the goal of reducing such transmissions to 70%. Self-reported HIV testing varied by state of residence. Approximately, two in three women reported that their health care provider asked them about HIV testing during prenatal care, and 82.3% of those asked reported receipt of a test. Objectives: The aim of this study was (1) to examine the prevalence of receipt of an HIV test during pregnancy and (2) to examine differences in HIV testing during pregnancy by race/ethnicity, state of residence, and other sociodemographic characteristics. Design: Population-based surveillance of women with a recent live birth from seven US states. Individuals were sampled from birth certificate records 2–6 months postpartum and surveyed about their behaviors and experiences before, during, and shortly after pregnancy. Methods: Data from the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System, a large, population-based survey, were used to estimate the prevalence of HIV testing during pregnancy during 2016–2019. Weighted prevalence estimates and 95% confidence intervals were calculated overall and by demographic and other selected characteristics. Results: Approximately two-thirds of women (66.1%) self-reported having a test for HIV during pregnancy. Prevalence varied by maternal characteristics and was highest among women who were non-Hispanic Black (80.7%) and among women who were aged ⩽ 24 years, had a high school education or less, were unmarried, or had Medicaid or no insurance for prenatal care (each > 70%). Self-reported HIV testing varied by state of residence. Approximately two in three women reported that their health care provider asked them about HIV testing during prenatal care, and 82.3% of those asked reported receipt of a test. Conclusion: About one in three Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System respondents did not report an HIV test during pregnancy. Health care providers can help educate pregnant patients about the importance of HIV testing and ensure universal testing to help identify individuals needing treatment and reduce the rates of mother-to-child HIV transmission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Investigating factors affecting HIV/AIDS knowledge among women in low and middle-income countries in Asia.
- Author
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Dzadey, Dela, Biswas, Raaj Kishore, and Bhowmik, Jahar
- Subjects
AIDS prevention ,HIV prevention ,HEALTH education ,STATISTICS ,HEALTH policy ,MIDDLE-income countries ,REGRESSION analysis ,SURVEYS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HUMAN services programs ,INTELLECT ,LOW-income countries ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,ACCESS to information ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
Sustainable Development Goal 3 focuses on reducing HIV/AIDS spread, for which disseminating correct information on the disease is required. This study investigated factors associated with HIV/AIDS knowledge among women in several Asian LMICs. Global Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey-6 (MICS-6) for Bangladesh, Lao, Mongolia and Nepal were assessed. Bivariate analysis and generalised linear regression models were fitted. Overall, 60% of the respondents were aware or heard of the existence of HIV/AIDS, with 63.2% having transmission knowledge and 80.4% misconception knowledge. Results revealed that several demographic factors such as wealth index, education and access to information had a significant association with HIV/AIDS knowledge. Mongolia and Nepal have formal programmes in place that may provide policy and implementation advantages compared to Bangladesh and Lao. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Costs of Providing Preexposure Prophylaxis for HIV Prevention at Community Health Centers in the United States.
- Author
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Shrestha, Ram K., Davis, Nicholas, Coleman, Megan, Rusie, Laura K., and Smith, Dawn K.
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,MEDICAL care costs ,COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL care ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,MEDICAL care use ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COST effectiveness ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Objective: Preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is recommended for people at risk of acquiring HIV. We assessed billable costs associated with PrEP delivery at community health centers. Methods: The Sustainable Health Center Implementation PrEP Pilot (SHIPP) study is an observational cohort of people receiving daily oral PrEP at participating federally qualified health centers and other community health centers. We assessed health care utilization and billable costs of providing PrEP at 2 health centers, 1 in Chicago, Illinois, and 1 in Washington, DC, from 2014 to 2018. The health centers followed the clinical practice guidelines for PrEP provision, including regular visits with health care providers and ongoing laboratory monitoring. Using clinic billing records and Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) coding, we retrospectively extracted data on the frequency and costs (in 2017 US dollars) of PrEP clinic visits and laboratory screening, for each patient, for 12 months since first PrEP prescription. Results: The average annual number of PrEP clinic visits and associated laboratory screens per patient was 5.1 visits and 25.2 screens in Chicago (n = 482 patients) and 5.4 visits and 24.8 screens in Washington, DC (n = 56 patients). The average annual PrEP billable cost per patient was $583 for clinic visits and $1070 for laboratory screens in Chicago and $923 for clinic visits and $1018 for laboratory screens in Washington, DC. The average annual total cost per patient was $1653 (95% CI, $1639-$1668) in Chicago and $1941 (95% CI, $1811-$2071) in Washington, DC. Conclusions: Our analysis, which provides PrEP billable cost estimates based on empirical data, may help inform health care providers who are considering implementing this HIV prevention strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Acceptability and Comfort Regarding Remotely Delivered PrEP Services in Mississippi.
- Author
-
Giorlando, Kayla K., Arnold, Trisha, Barnett, Andrew P., Leigland, Avery, Whiteley, Laura, Brock, James B., and Brown, Larry K.
- Abstract
Despite the prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Mississippi, access to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is mostly limited to urban areas. Remote PrEP care via telemedicine, HIV self-testing, and prescription mail delivery can improve care in underserved communities. This mixed methods study assessed the acceptability and feasibility of using remote PrEP care, compared to alternatives. This consisted of (1) a cross-sectional survey and (2) interviews. PrEP-eligible adults were recruited from community-based organizations across Mississippi while accessing HIV testing between December 2019 and May 2022. Those surveyed (n = 63) indicated the greatest comfort in receiving PrEP via mail delivery (m = 5.14) and telemedicine (m = 4.89) and least comfort at gyms (m = 3.92). Comfort significantly differed between mail delivery and gyms (F = 2.90; P <.01). Those interviewed (n = 26) expressed relatively high comfort with remote PrEP care citing enhanced accessibility, privacy, simplicity, and quality. Remote PrEP services were acceptable and feasible among our sample, thus, should be expanded in Mississippi to address unmet needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Improving the Health of People Who Inject Drugs Through COVID-19–Related Policies.
- Author
-
Hill, Katherine, Thakarar, Kinna, Eslinger, Hilary, Prosperino, Lill, and Sue, Kimberly L.
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH education ,INTRAVENOUS drug abusers ,INTRAVENOUS drug abuse ,PUBLIC health ,HARM reduction ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,PATIENT education ,COVID-19 pandemic ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
In the article, the authors discuss the need to adopt COVID-19-related policies to improve the health and safety of people who inject drugs (PWID). Among the policies in the U.S. are health literacy enhancements and improved access to work-from-home options. Also cited is how increased access to prevention, harm reduction, and treatment programs could further improve the health of PWIDs.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. HIV and Addiction Services for People Who Inject Drugs: Healthcare Provider Perceptions on Integrated Care in the U.S. South.
- Author
-
Bradford, Davis, Parman, Mariel, Levy, Sera, Turner, Wesli H., Li, Li, Leisch, Leah, Eaton, Ellen, and Crockett, Kaylee B.
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,HIV prevention ,HEALTH policy ,FOCUS groups ,INTRAVENOUS drug abuse ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,SOCIAL stigma ,CURRICULUM ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,QUALITATIVE research ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,CLINICAL competence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,THEMATIC analysis ,DRUG abusers ,MEDICAL education ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
This qualitative study evaluates physician training and experience with treatment and prevention services for people who inject drugs (PWID) including medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) and HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). The Behavioral Model of Healthcare Utilization for Vulnerable Populations was applied as a framework for data analysis and interpretation. Two focus groups were conducted, one with early career physicians (n = 6) and one with mid- to late career physicians (n = 3). Focus group transcripts were coded and analyzed using thematic analysis to identify factors affecting implementation of treatment and prevention services for PWID. Respondents identified that increasing the availability of providers prescribing MOUD was a critical enabling factor for PWID seeking and receiving care. Integrated, interdisciplinary services were identified as an additional resource although these remain fragmented in the current healthcare system. Barriers to care included provider awareness, stigma associated with substance use, and access limitations. Providers identified the interwoven risk factors associated with injection drug use that must be addressed, including the risk of HIV acquisition, notably more at the forefront in the minds of early career physicians. Additional research is needed addressing the medical education curriculum, health system, and healthcare policy to address the addiction and HIV crises in the U.S. South. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Health Equity Considerations: HIV Intervention Adaptation for Black Women in Community Corrections.
- Author
-
Johnson, Karen A., Hunt, Timothy, Goddard-Eckrich, Dawn, Wu, Elwin, Richards, Stanley, Tibbetts, Rick, Rowe, Jessica C., Maynard, Quentin R., Goodwin, Sharun, Okine, Joana, Wainberg, Milton L., El-Bassel, Nabila, and Gilbert, Louisa
- Subjects
PREVENTION of sexually transmitted diseases ,HIV prevention ,DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,AFFINITY groups ,PILOT projects ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,FOCUS groups ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SEXUAL intercourse ,MEDICAL care of prisoners ,SELF-efficacy ,RISK perception ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,THEMATIC analysis ,ANAL sex ,AFRICAN Americans ,WOMEN'S health ,UNSAFE sex ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Objectives: This article describes the process used to adapt the only group-based, computer-assisted, HIV/sexually transmitted infections (STI) prevention intervention designed for drug-using Black women in community corrections using an integrated health equity ADAPT-ITT framework with a peer engagement lens. Methods: Key adaptation partners included cisgender, drug-using Black women in community corrections, and Black, female, community reentry providers slated to deliver the adapted intervention. Focus groups and a study pilot were held. Results: The resulting intervention, Empowering African-American Women on the Road to Health (E-WORTH), features HIV/STI-specific Afrocentric themes of risk and resiliency tailored for and by Black women in the criminal legal system. Evaluation of E-WORTH confirms its cultural resonance. Participants had a 54% lowered odds of testing positive for any STI and reported 38% fewer acts of condomless vaginal or anal intercourse at 12-month follow-up. Conclusions: Findings underscore the need to develop an adaptation model that is explicitly health equity in focus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Feasibility and Acceptability Pilot Test of Connecting Latinos en Parejas: A Couples-Based HIV Prevention Intervention for Latino Male Couples.
- Author
-
Martinez, Omar, Fernandez, M. Isabel, Yang, Cui, Wu, Elwin, Valentin, Omar, and Johnson, Mallory
- Subjects
GAY couples ,HIV prevention ,SAFE sex ,DYADIC communication ,HISPANIC Americans - Abstract
Despite recent emphasis on couples-based HIV prevention interventions, efficacious interventions for Latino male couples have yet to be tested. The study examined the feasibility and acceptability of the Connecting Latinos en Pareja (CLP) intervention, a couples-based HIV prevention intervention for Latino male couples. This pilot demonstrated high feasibility, meeting targets for recruitment, retention, and intervention completion. We recruited a diverse cohort of 46 individuals/23 couples with a retention rate of 80% over 6 months and a 100% intervention completion rate in both conditions (four structured couple sessions in each condition). This pilot RCT was not powered to detect significant intervention impact on the primary outcome; however, there was a significant increase in relationship functioning among couples in the intervention group relative to controls and promising trends in changes in several key outcome and mediating variables. Secondary analysis documented trends in the expected directions for several other key hypothesized mechanisms of action (stimulant use, psychological symptoms, quality of life) as well as the primary outcome of proportion of protected sex acts (overall and broken out by main vs. outside partners). Qualitative exit interviews revealed high levels of acceptability of the CLP intervention. Participants highlighted affective component of the intervention and perceived effectiveness in improving dyadic communication skills and safer sex practices. Our findings show that a pilot trial of CLP is highly feasible and acceptable, with CLP demonstrating promising evidence of changes in key intervention mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Leveraging Randomized Controlled Trial Design: HIV and Wellness Interventions with Marginalized Populations.
- Author
-
Goddard-Eckrich, Dawn, Thomas, Brittany, Gilbert, Louisa, Aifah, Angela, Hunt, Timothy, Sarfo, Bright, Wu, Elwin, Mandavia, Amar, Chang, Mingway, Matthews, Lisa, Johnson, Jessica, Rodriguez, Sandra, Johnson, Karen, and El-Bassel, Nabila
- Subjects
PREVENTION of chronic diseases ,HIV prevention ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,PATIENT aftercare ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,HUMAN research subjects ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,HUMAN comfort ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,SOCIAL stigma ,DIET ,PHYSICAL activity ,RISK assessment ,HEALTH ,ATTENTION ,RESEARCH funding ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,POVERTY ,STATISTICAL models ,HEALTH promotion ,EXERCISE therapy - Abstract
Treatment as usual has historically been used as control arms for randomized controlled trials (RCTs), but utilizing wellness interventions as active comparison conditions can advance the evidence base of such interventions while increasing access to health promotion content. We use the results from the CONNECT 2 RCT's wellness intervention control arm as a case example of active comparison conditions that can control for dosage or attentional effects in future research. We summarized existing studies on wellness control HIV RCT interventions, introduced CONNECT 2, and discussed recruitment, randomization, and the intervention. Overall, Wellness Promotion participants were more likely to engage in physical activity, eat healthier, and do more vigorous exercise when compared with HIV Risk Reduction. CONNECT 2 Wellness intervention results solidify why wellness interventions can play an important role in treatment guidelines. Developing and implementing this model can be a more ethical, equitable, and holistic approach among underserved communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Partners or donors: The perceived roles of Global Fund Principal Recipient NGOs in HIV prevention programmes in Ukraine.
- Author
-
McGill, Svetlana
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,HEALTH programs ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Ukraine has one of Europe's fastest growing HIV rates and in 2003–2012 was one of the largest recipients of funding from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GF). Doctoral research recently completed by the author investigates the conduct and practice of international and national nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) as Principal Recipients (PRs) of GF grants in Ukraine from 2003 to 2012. An ethnographic enquiry including 50 participant interviews was conducted in three oblasts in Ukraine, and in its capital, Kyiv. The paper presents some of the findings that emerged from the analysis. Discussing the PR NGOs roles and practices in delivering HIV prevention programmes funded by GF, the author argues that the anticipated benefits of NGO partnerships between PR NGOs and their Sub-Recipients (SRs) have not been achieved. Rather, PRs acted as donors and ran highly discretionary policies in channelling GF funding to SRs that installed competition and vertical relations between NGO-grantors and NGO-grantees. The outcome was a servile civil society that is dependent on external funding and is unable to genuinely represent their communities. With an anticipated GF phasing out from Ukraine, there is a critical lack of advocacy potential of the civil society to articulate and defend the needs of PLHIV when transferring HIV services into state funding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A Layer Plus Approach to Implementation Research and Collaboration for Long-Acting Injectable Preexposure Prophylaxis for HIV Prevention.
- Author
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Pilgrim, Nanlesta A., Evans, Tammeka M., and Czarnogorski, Maggie
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,AIDS education ,INJECTIONS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,ANTIVIRAL agents ,WORLD health ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,SEXUAL minorities ,MEDICAL research ,HEALTH promotion ,SEXUAL health - Abstract
In 2020, the HIV prevention clinical trials, HPTN (HIV Prevention Trials Network) 083 and 084, reported that long-acting injectable cabotegravir (CAB-LA) for HIV prevention was statistically superior to daily oral tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine (TDF/FTC) for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in cisgender men and transgender women who have sex with men, and cisgender women. However, clinical efficacy does not translate to real-world effectiveness and clinical practice as evidenced by current global use of oral PrEP. There are ~626,000 users of PrEP, which is significantly below the 3 million goal set by UNAIDS for 2020. Implementation will be key to ensuring that CAB-LA reaches those who desire to use it. We describe the Layer Plus Approach for CAB-LA for PrEP dissemination and implementation. The "Layer" is focused on integrating CAB-LA into existing PrEP models of care and understanding the best delivery channels that could be established in existing programs. Important implications of layering include preparing health professionals to provide CAB-LA, improving access for potential users, and addressing existing PrEP structural and facility barriers. "Plus," which accounts for the existing disparities in PrEP access and use, means expanding CAB-LA to reach individuals for whom HIV prevention options have not been accessible or who have lapsed on oral PrEP. Implications for Plus include the development of new structures, systems, policies, and processes. A key aspect to the Approach is building collaborations to aid successful implementation. The Layer Plus Approach is a simple but strategic framework or a tailored approach to guide dissemination research and implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Bareback sex: Breaking the rules of sexual health and the assumption of risks.
- Author
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Ávila, Rubén
- Subjects
UNSAFE sex ,SEXUAL health ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,SOCIAL factors ,HUMAN sexuality ,HEALTH programs ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Many studies have provided information about different individual, social and cultural factors underlying the assumption of risk in sexual practices among men who have sex with other men (MSM). However, there has been little analysis of the role of sexual health programmes in the understanding of bareback sex. Following sociological debates about the effects of governmentality in health promotion, this article examines the extent to which HIV prevention campaigns addressed to MSM in Spain are implicated in the construction of a social context where bareback sex is possible. It argues that the implication of Spanish LGBTI activism and the social link between AIDS and masculine homosexuality from the outset of the epidemic have given safer sex a moral value. At the same time, the creation of a scenario where sexual care is perceived as desirable also raises a subjection process where individuals are urged to answer whether they engage in safer sex practices or not. This article concludes that a new perspective on intervention is necessary to address the realities of HIV infections among MSM in contemporary western culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Motivating factors associated with oral pre-exposure prophylaxis use among female sex workers in South Africa.
- Author
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Makhakhe, Nosipho Faith, MeyerWeitz, Anna, and Sliep, Yvonne
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,SEX work ,SELF-efficacy ,PARENTING ,HIV infections ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,LOVE - Abstract
To explore the motivating factors that encourage female sex workers to take oral PrEP, despite the challenges that come with adherence. The 39 participants in this study consisted of female sex workers, peer educators, a counselor, and a researcher. Participants took PrEP as an expression of self-love. Some participants described PrEP as empowering because they could independently prevent HIV. They were also motivated by parenting, hope and future aspirations. It is important for future PrEP interventions to incorporate behavioral strategies that appeal to the user's personal and deeper motivations for living. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. HIV PREVENTION RESEARCH ETHICS: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE SPECIAL ISSUE.
- Author
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FISHER, CELIA B.
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,SEX industry ,HEALTH equity ,MEDICAL care of minorities - Abstract
THIS SPECIAL ISSUE OF THE JOURNAL of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics represents a sampling of projects fostered through the NIDA-funded Fordham University HIV Prevention Research Ethics Institute. The first three articles employ processes of co-learning to give voice to the experiences of individuals recovering from substance abuse and engaged in sex work who have participated in HIV prevention studies in the United States, India, and the Philippines. The fourth article describes a unique community-based approach to the development of research ethics training modules designed to increase participation of American Indian and Alaskan Native (AI/AN) tribal members as partners in research on health disparities. The last two articles focus a critical scholarly lens on two underexamined areas confronting IRB review of HIV research: The emerging and continuously changing ethical challenges of using social media sites for recruitment into HIV prevention research, and the handling of research-related complaints from participants involving perceived research harms or research experiences that do not accord with their initial expectations. Together, the articles in this special issue identify key ethical crossroads and provide suggestions for best practices that respect the values and merit the trust of research participants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The CDC HIV Outbreak Coordination Unit: Developing a Standardized, Collaborative Approach to HIV Outbreak Assessment and Response.
- Author
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Oster, Alexandra M., France, Anne Marie, McClung, Robert P., Buchacz, Kate, Lyss, Sheryl B., Peters, Philip J., Weidle, Paul J., Switzer, William M., Phillip Jr, Stanley A., Brooks, John T., and Hernandez, Angela L.
- Subjects
HIV infection epidemiology ,HIV prevention ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,HEALTH care teams - Abstract
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and state, territorial, and local health departments have expanded efforts to detect and respond to HIV clusters and outbreaks in the United States. In July 2017, CDC created the HIV Outbreak Coordination Unit (OCU) to ensure consistent and collaborative assessment of requests from health departments for consultation or support on possible HIV clusters and outbreaks of elevated concern. The HIV OCU is a multidisciplinary, cross-organization functional unit within CDC's Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention. HIV OCU members have expertise in areas such as outbreak detection and investigation, prevention, laboratory services, surveillance and epidemiology, policy, communication, and operations. HIV OCU discussions facilitate problem solving, coordination, and situational awareness. Between HIV OCU meetings, designated CDC staff members communicate regularly with health departments to provide support and assessment. During July 2017–December 2019, the HIV OCU reviewed 31 possible HIV clusters and outbreaks (ie, events) in 22 states that were detected by CDC, health departments, or local partners; 17 events involved HIV transmission associated with injection drug use, and other events typically involved sexual transmission or overall increases in HIV diagnoses. CDC supported health departments remotely or on site with planning and prioritization; data collection, management, and analysis; communications; laboratory support; multistate coordination; and expansion of HIV prevention services. The HIV OCU has augmented CDC's support of HIV cluster and outbreak assessment and response at health departments and had important internal organizational benefits. Health departments may benefit from developing or strengthening similar units to coordinate detection and response efforts within and across public health agencies and advance the national Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Exploring Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) and Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP) Knowledge in Incarcerated Men.
- Author
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Valera, Pamela, Ali, Zaire S., Cunningham, Diamond, McLaughlin, Christopher, and Acevedo, Sebastian
- Subjects
PRE-exposure prophylaxis ,HIV ,HIV infections ,HIV prevention ,MENTAL health policy - Abstract
People who are incarcerated have a disproportionately high risk of contracting human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). While there is no known cure for HIV, there are biomedical approaches that can successfully manage the virus and prevent its transmission. A total of 267 men who are incarcerated completed a cross-sectional survey focused on cancer health, HIV prevention, and mental health in three state prisons. The mean age was 39 years. The majority had an annual income of US$10,000 or less, self-identified as heterosexual, not married, had children, did not have any military status, and identified as African American/Black. Less than 4% indicated that they had heard about Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), and only 3% had heard of Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP). PrEP and PEP effectively prevent HIV infection, but little attention has focused on increasing the knowledge and awareness of these HIV prevention interventions in the incarcerated population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. "What other choices might I have made?": Sexual Minority Men, the PrEP Cascade and the Shifting Subjective Dimensions of HIV Risk.
- Author
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Gaspar, Mark, Wells, Alex, Hull, Mark, Tan, Darrell H. S., Lachowsky, Nathan, and Grace, Daniel
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,HIV infection risk factors ,RISK-taking behavior ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEN'S health ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,RESEARCH methodology ,HUMAN sexuality ,PRACTICAL politics ,SOCIAL norms ,MEN ,INTERVIEWING ,RISK perception ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SEXUAL minorities ,HEALTH attitudes ,RESEARCH funding ,DECISION making ,SEX customs ,COMMUNICATION ,THEMATIC analysis ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
The PrEP Cascade is a dominant framework for investigating barriers to HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), an HIV prevention tool. We interviewed 37 PrEP users and 8 non-PrEP users in Ontario and British Columbia, Canada, about their decision-making through the Cascade. Participants were HIV-negative gay, bisexual, and queer men (GBQM). The data were analyzed using thematic analysis. PrEP decision-making was based on pragmatic considerations (logistics, costs, and systemic barriers), biomedical considerations (efficacy, side-effects, and sexually transmitted infections), and subjective considerations (identity, politics, and changing sexual preferences). Affective attachments to established versions of "safer sex" (condoms and serosorting) made some GBQM less likely to try PrEP. Some GBQM expressed increased social expectations to use PrEP, have condomless sex, and serodifferent sex. These findings support offering PrEP at no-cost, offering individualized counseling and community-based opportunities to discuss PrEP use and changing sexual practices, and improving communication on the manageability of PrEP side-effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Mass media and communication interventions to increase HIV testing among gay and other men who have sex with men: Social marketing and visual design component analysis.
- Author
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Riddell, Julie, Teal, Gemma, Flowers, Paul, Boydell, Nicola, Coia, Nicky, and McDaid, Lisa
- Subjects
HIV prevention ,CINAHL database ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,MASS media ,SOCIAL marketing ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDICAL screening ,MEN who have sex with men ,MEDLINE ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Mass media and communication interventions can play a role in increasing HIV testing among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM). Despite the key role of social marketing principles and visual design within intervention development of this type, evidence is limited regarding interventions' social marketing mix or visual design. As part of a systematic review, intervention content was assessed using social marketing theory and social semiotics. Data were extracted on the nature of the intervention, mode of delivery, use of imagery, content and tone and the eight key characteristics of social marketing. Data were synthesised narratively. Across the 19 included studies, reference to social marketing principles was often superficial. Common design features were identified across the interventions, regardless of effectiveness, including: the use of actors inferred to be GBMSM; use of 'naked' and sexually explicit imagery; and the use of text framed as statements or instructions. Our results suggest that effective interventions tended to use multiple modes of delivery, indicating high social marketing complexity. However, this is only part of intervention development, and social marketing principles are key to driving the development process. We identified consistent aspects of intervention design, but were unable to determine whether this is based on evidence of effectiveness or a lack of originality in intervention design. An openness to novel ideas in design and delivery is key to ensuring that evidence-informed interventions are effective for target populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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