AIDS Community-Based Outreach/Intervention

AIDS Community-Based Outreach/Intervention Research Program, 1992-1998
AIDS Community-Based Outreach/Intervention Research Program, 1992-1998

AIDS Community-Based Outreach/Intervention

Cooperative Agreement for AIDS Community-Based Outreach/Intervention Research Program, 1992-1998

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Select 10 research articles relevant to your intended research topic. Develop a literature matrix that summarizes the individual articles. You may create a matrix similar to the matrix posted in Doc Sharing, for Cooperative Agreement for AIDS Community-Based Outreach/Intervention Research Program, 1992-1998

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Cooperative Agreement for AIDS Community-Based Outreach/Intervention Research Program, 1992-1998

Authors Title Journal Publication Date Study Design Data Type Subjects Results Comments/Outcomes/Implications/conclusions
Janet J. Myers, Lucy Bradley-Springer, Mi-Suk Kang Dufour, Kimberly A. Koester, Stephanie Beane,  Nancy Warren, Jeffrey Beal, and Linda Rose Frank Supporting the Integration of HIV Testing Into

Primary Care Settings

American Journal of Public Health June 2012 a retrospective case study Both quantitative and qualitative data 38 321 participants The findings of the study showed that compared with other AETC training; HIV testing training was longer and used a broader variety of strategies to educate more providers per training.

During education, providers were able to understand their primary care responsibility to address public health concerns through HIV testing.

In conclusion AETC efforts illustrate how integration of the principles of primary care and public health can be promoted through professional training.
Christy L. Beaudin and Susan M. Chambre HIV/AIDS as a chronic disease: Emergence from the plaque model The American Behavioral Scientist May 1996 a healthcare survey of AIDS cases in the US across all groups Quantitative data 476, 899 The findings of this study show that there was an increased impact on human resource as well as public healthcare services In conclusion, the HIV/AIDS epidemic provides challenges for public policy because of the many complex scientific, human service, and public health activities involved.
Scott C. Ratzan, J. Gregory Payne and Holly A. Masett Effective Health Message Design: The American Responds to AIDS Campaign The American Behavioral Scientist November 1994 A case study of healthcare communication Quantitative and qualitative data Multimedia message The results of this study show COAST model can be effectively adopted to pass health communication messages In conclusion, there is need for combination of these strategies for continued effective AIDS campaigns
Ronald O. Valdiserri and Gary R. West Barriers to the Assessment of Unmet Need in Planning HIV/AIDS Prevention Programs Public Administration Review Jan/Feb 1994 A case study of CBOs and NMOs  

Quantitative and qualitative data

229 The results shows that there are various barriers to effective protection of AIDS The study concludes that despite the intervening obstacles, comprehensive, methodologically sound needs assessments conducted collaboratively by the providers and consumers of HIV prevention services are essential to development of effective prevention programs
Donna H. McCree, Gregorio Millett, Chanza Baytop, Scott Royal, Jonathan Ellen, Perry N. Halkitis, Sandra A. Kupprat, and Sara Gillen Lessons Learned From Use of Social Network Strategy in

HIV Testing Programs Targeting African American Men

Who Have Sex With Men

American Journal of Public Health October 2013 A case study between April

2008 and August 2010.

Quantitative data 149

men

The results of the study show that several common lessons regarding development of the plan, staffing, training, and use of incentives were identified across the sites. Collectively, these lessons indicate use of SNS is resource-intensive, requiring a detailed plan, dedicated staff, and continual input from clients and staff for successful implementation. In conclusion, SNS may provide a strategy for identifying and targeting clusters of high-risk Black MSM for HIV testing. Given the resources needed to implement the strategy, additional studies using an experimental design are needed to determine the cost-effectiveness of SNS compared with other testing strategies.
Marilyn M. Metzler, Donna L. Higgins, Carolyn G. Beeker, Nicholas Freudenberg, Paula M. Lantz, Kirsten D. Senturia, Alison A. Eisinger, Edna A. Viruell-Fuentes, Bookda Gheisar, Ann-Gel Palermo, and Donald Softley Addressing Urban Health in Detroit, New York City, and Seattle Through Community-Based Participatory Research Partnerships American Journal of Public Health May 2003 A case study of three urban research centers  

Quantitative data

Three urban centers The results of this study indicate that activities critical in partnership development include sharing decision making, defining principles of collaboration, establishing research priorities, and securing funding. Intermediate outcomes were sustained CBPR partnership, trust within the partnership, public health research programs, and increased capacity to conduct CBPR. Challenges included the time needed for meaningful collaboration, concerns regarding sustainable funding, and issues related to institutional racism. The study concludes that the URC experiences suggest that CBPR can be successfully implemented in diverse settings.
Hilary L. Surratt, Wendee M. Wechsberg, Linda B. Cottler, Carl G. Leukefeld, Hugh Klein, and David P. Desmond Acceptability of the female condom among women at risk for HIV infection The American Behavioral Scientist May 1998 A six-site cohort standardized study design Quantitative and qualitative data 318 The results of the study shows a significant correlation between use of female condoms as well as other community-based preventive measures and HIV/AIDS prevalence The study concludes that sustained use of preventive measures would go a long way in reducing prevalence of HIV/AIDS
Lisa R. Metsch, Daniel J. Feaster, Lauren Gooden, Tim Matheson, Raul N. Mandler, Louise Haynes,

Susan Tross, Tiffany Kyle, Dianne Gallup, Andrzej S. Kosinski, Antoine Douaihy, Bruce R. Schackman,

Moupali Das, Robert Lindblad, Sarah Erickson, P. Todd Korthuis, Steve Martino, James L. Sorensen,

José Szapocznik,  Rochelle Walensky, Bernard Branson, and Grant N. Colfax,

Implementing Rapid HIV Testing With or Without

Risk-Reduction Counseling in Drug Treatment Centers:

Results of a Randomized Trial

American Journal of Public Health June 2012 randomized controlled

trial

Quantitative data 1281 participants The study findings show that a combined on-site rapid testing participants received more HIV test results than off-site testing referral participants (P < .001; Mantel-Haenszel risk ratio = 4.52; 97.5% confidence interval [CI] = 3.57, 5.72). At 6 months, there

were no significant differences in unprotected intercourse episodes between the

combined on-site testing arms and the referral arm (P = .39; incidence rate ratio

[IRR] = 1.04; 97.5% CI = 0.95, 1.14) or the 2 on-site testing arms (P = .81; IRR = 1.03;

97.5% CI = 0.84, 1.26)

In conclusion, this study demonstrated on-site rapid HIV testing’s value in drug treatment centers and found no additional benefit from HIV sexual risk-reduction counseling.
Benjamin P. Bowser The Social Dimensions of the AIDS Epidemic: A Sociology of the AIDS Epidemic The International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy

 

 

2002 Theoretical approach Qualitative data Numerous theories The results of this study show that group and community-based strategies are appropriate for addressing various sociological challenges that continued to inflict on people living with AIDS as well as the AIDS  epidemic The study concludes that there is need  for continued  implementation of preventive measures to address AIDS menace
Chinazo O. Cunningham, John Paul Sanchez, Daliah I. Heller, and

Nancy L. Sohler

Assessment of a Medical Outreach Program to Improve

Access to HIV Care Among Marginalized Individuals

American Journal of Public Health October 2007 The study design involved an examination of total a of 2666 medical appointment records with unique patient identifier from CitiWide’s and Montefiore’s databases from 2003 to 2005. The study involved collection of quantitative data on elements such as patients’

sociodemographic information, appointment date, appointment

location (i.e., single-room occupancy

hotel, CitiWide’s drop-in

center, or Montefiore’s community

clinic), medical provider to

be seen, date the appointment

was made, person making the appointment

(i.e., medical provider

or nonmedical provider), and

whether the appointment was

kept

 

416 patients Patients kept appointments more frequently when they were

walk-in or same-day appointments (compared with future appointments;

adjusted odds ratio [AOR]=1.69; 95% confidence interval

[CI]=1.38, 2.08), when they were at a community-based

organization’s drop-in center (compared with single-room occupancy

hotels; AOR=2.50; 95% CI=1.54, 4.17), or when made by

nonmedical providers (compared with medical providers; future

appointments: AOR=1.38; 95% CI=1.05, 1.80; same-day appointments:

AOR=1.70; 95% CI=1.03, 2.81).

These findings demonstrate the importance of program-related characteristics in health services delivery to marginalized populations.

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