ABSTRACT

Find out how best to develop HIV prevention programs that work

Community Collaborative Partnerships: The Foundation for HIV Prevention Research Efforts is a must read for anyone interested in developing prevention programs within high-risk urban environments. Illustrative case studies, quality research, revealing personal stories, and helpful tables and figures provide valuable insights on innovative ways to partner in the prevention of the spread of HIV in youths. Leading experts in the field offer practical strategies to dissolve the distrust individuals in a community hold for researchers not a part of that community, fostering an effective collaboration to deal with problems. The book also describes ways to go beyond the United States’ model to reveal how to replicate the same dynamic relationships in international communities.

Active participation with the community and families has been found to be vital for the success of HIV/AIDS prevention efforts. Community Collaborative Partnerships: The Foundation for HIV Prevention Research Efforts solves the common problem of forcing ineffective program models onto an unreceptive community. Program developers get the necessary tools to develop relationships and cultivate substantive input from those in the community to help ensure better program results. The research here is up-to-date, and the suggestions invaluable.

Topics in Community Collaborative Partnerships: The Foundation for HIV Prevention Research Efforts include:

  • the role of parenting in mental health and HIV risk
  • research findings about frequency of sexual intercourse among adolescents
  • racial socialization and family role in HIV knowledge
  • family influences on exposure to situations of sexual possibility
  • preadolescent risk behavior influence on parental monitoring
  • strategies for collaboration between community and academic HIV prevention researchers
  • involving urban parents as collaborators in HIV prevention research
  • motivators—and barriers—to participation of minority families in a prevention program
  • transferring a university-led HIV prevention program to the community
  • Trinidad and Tobago HIV/AIDS prevention using a family-based program
  • and much more!

Community Collaborative Partnerships: The Foundation for HIV Prevention Research Efforts is valuable reading for researchers, program developers, community-based organizations, public policy/advocacy organizations, community organizers, educators, and students in the fields of social work, public health, public administration, and community medicine.

part 1|240 pages

Part I

chapter 1|20 pages

Understanding African American Youth HIV Knowledge

Exploring the Role of Racial Socialization and Family Communication about “Hard to Talk about Topics”

chapter 1|19 pages

Urban African American Pre-Adolescent Social Problem Solving Skills

Family Influences and Association with Exposure to Situations of Sexual Possibility

chapter 1|25 pages

Social Support for African American Low-Income Parents

The Influence of Preadolescents' Risk Behavior and Support Role on Parental Monitoring and Child Outcomes

part 2|138 pages

Part II

chapter 2|19 pages

Voices from the Community

Key Ingredients for Community Collaboration