ABSTRACT

AIDS, Drugs and Prevention brings together a range of international contributions on the research, theory and practice of developing community-based HIV prevention. It aims to understand how individual actions to prevent HIV transmission are constrained and encouraged by situational and social context. Drawing on ethnographic and epidemiological research among populations of drug users, sex workers and gay men, it explores how future HIV prevention interventions can target changes at the level of the individual as well as at the level of the community and wider social environment.
AIDS, Drugs and Prevention offers practical and theoretical insights into community-based health work in the time of AIDS. It provides invaluable reading for students, lecturers, researchers and practioners in health promotion, health policy, social work and medical sociology.

chapter 3|20 pages

Americans and syringe exchange

John K.Watters

chapter 4|24 pages

AIDS prevention and drug policy

Richard Hartnoll and Dagmar Hedrich

chapter 7|15 pages

Prostitution and peer education

Marina Barnard and Neil McKeganey

chapter 8|15 pages

Save sex/save lives*

Cindy Patton

chapter 13|15 pages

Peer-driven outreach to combat HIV among IDUs

Jean-Paul C.Grund, Robert S.Broadhead, Douglas D.Heckathorn, L.Synn Stern and Denise L.Anthony