Community Interventions and AIDSEdison J. Trickett, Willo Pequegnat As news headlines report staggering numbers of people infected with HIV or AIDS across the globe and as stereotypes of typical AIDS patients become less and less specific to particular sexual orientations and ethnic backgrounds, the AIDS pandemic shows little sign of relenting. AIDS crosses geopolitical and social barriers, and social and behavioral scientists are confronted with the new challenge of developing scientific inquiry and corresponding interventions around participatory, community-based, and community-focused methods. These interventions are increasingly targeting the contextual influences on individual behavior, such as peer groups, social networks and support systems, and community norms. Community-level interventions also draw on local resources and are respectful of sociocultural circumstances and traditions. This book articulates how the social and behavioral sciences can respond to HIV/AIDS. It is written for all who have a stake in AIDS research, stimulating discussion and debate about the natures of community research and intervention broadly across such disciplines as public health, community health education, urban planning, psychology, sociology, anthropology, and philosophy of science. The book proposes alternative perspectives on means of ascertaining knowledge about the HIV/AIDS pandemic and the inclusion of community collaboration in interventions. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 82
Page v
... example, generated over 1 million and 2 million “hits,” respectively. Despite this public dialog, the contextual frame of the disease has not, until this book, been the focal point of a book for researchers and community service ...
... example, generated over 1 million and 2 million “hits,” respectively. Despite this public dialog, the contextual frame of the disease has not, until this book, been the focal point of a book for researchers and community service ...
Page 4
... example, the distanced and neutral stance of the researcher with respect to the people with whom he/she works is being replaced by the concept of collaboration between the researcher and the researched (Schensul, this volume; Singer ...
... example, the distanced and neutral stance of the researcher with respect to the people with whom he/she works is being replaced by the concept of collaboration between the researcher and the researched (Schensul, this volume; Singer ...
Page 10
... example, directs attention to those aspects of the community that shape what is possible and permissible and what is not. The availability of certain behavior settings provides one such example of the opportunities and constraints ...
... example, directs attention to those aspects of the community that shape what is possible and permissible and what is not. The availability of certain behavior settings provides one such example of the opportunities and constraints ...
Page 11
... example, Seibt et al. (1995) found a positive relationship between social attachment to the gay community and its institutions and safe-sex behavior. They suggest the power of social integration into gay culture as a protective factor ...
... example, Seibt et al. (1995) found a positive relationship between social attachment to the gay community and its institutions and safe-sex behavior. They suggest the power of social integration into gay culture as a protective factor ...
Page 12
... example of how this might be accomplished at the agency level is provided by Singer and Weeks (this volume). Their description of the “Hartford Model” outlines the potential value of promoting and maintaining interdependencies among ...
... example of how this might be accomplished at the agency level is provided by Singer and Weeks (this volume). Their description of the “Hartford Model” outlines the potential value of promoting and maintaining interdependencies among ...
Contents
28 | |
HIV Circulating Knowledges and Local Resistances | 56 |
4 The State of the Art in Community HIV Prevention Interventions | 88 |
Implications to Community Impact and Sustainability | 105 |
Promise and Problems | 130 |
7 The Hartford Model of AIDS PracticeResearch Collaboration | 153 |
8 Sustainability in HIV Prevention Research | 176 |
How Can HIV Prevention Scientists Play an Effective Role in Practice? | 196 |
Theoretical and Methodological Considerations | 222 |
Overcoming Inadequacies of the Randomized Controlled Trial Paradigm | 249 |
12 Toward the Next Generation of AIDS Interventions With Community Impact | 278 |
Index | 287 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
African American AIDS Education Altman American Journal analysis approach behavior change bisexual collaboration community impact community interventions Community Psychology community-based organizations community-level HIV prevention community-level interventions condom context cultural diffusion diffusion of innovation disease effects epidemic ethnographic evaluation example Hartford Model Hispanic Health Council HIV infection HIV intervention HIV prevention interventions HIV/AIDS identified implementation individuals influence injection drug users institutions inter involvement issues Journal of Public Kelly Latino Latkin Merrill Singer methods multiple munity narrative needle needs nity norms organizational outcomes paradigm participants participatory action research partnerships Patton perspective population potential prevention programs prevention research problems Public Health qualitative randomized rapid assessment relationships risk reduction role safer sex sample Schensul sex workers sexual sexually transmitted diseases Singer social capital social networks strategies structure sustainability syndemic target technology transfer tervention theory tion trial Trickett vention women York