Library

International HIV Prevention Research at the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, University of California San Francisco

The principal objective of the International Core at the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies (CAPS) is to facilitate high quality international research by creating effective and productive partnerships between CAPS scientists and HIV prevention researchers from developing countries.

Stress and Coping in Gay Male Caregivers of Men with AIDS

Traditionally, responsibility for providing care in the home for people with serious illness has fallen to women as wives, mothers, or daughters of the afflicted individual. Among the many societal repercussions of the HIV/AIDS epidemic has been the creation of a new group of caregivers—gay men who are the primary caregivers for their partners with AIDS.

Systematic Reviews Demystified: Conducting Systematic Reviews on HIV Infection and AIDS

Physicians, researchers, public health practitioners and patients are deluged with unmanageable amounts of information about the best approaches to prevention, treatment and health care delivery. Over the last 30 years, there has been an exponential rise in the number of published scientific articles across health fields.

The Legacy Project: Lessons Learned About Conducting Community-Based Research

Since 1991, the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies (CAPS) has conducted collaborative research with local community-based HIV prevention organizations within a consortium model. Community-based research (CBR) refers to research that is conducted by or with the participation of community members. As conducted by CAPS, CBR was a full partnership, with the CBO partner taking the lead on developing the research question, delivering the intervention, and collecting the data.

The Voluntary HIV-1 Counseling and Testing Efficacy Study: A Randomized Controlled Trial in Three Developing Countries

The Voluntary HIV-1 Counseling and Testing Efficacy Study was designed to measure the efficacy of HIV VCT in developing country and resource poor settings where access to antiretrovirals and other expensive medications is difficult or impossible.

Discovering Global Success: Future Directions for HIV Prevention in the Developing World

The National Institutes of Health’s Fogarty International Center in collaboration with a number of other agencies sponsored the Fogarty Workshop on International HIV/AIDS Prevention Research Opportunities on April 18-20, 1998. The AIDS Research Institute at the University of California, San Francisco hosted the Workshop.

Report Back from the MSM IDU Forum

This forum grew out of an interest in having dialogues between researchers, providers and community members (these categories are not mutually exclusive groups). This would serve the dual purpose of giving research legs so that it can inform programs and helping ensure that program and life experience inform research studies. Another factor for calling this meeting was the high prevalence of HIV among men who have sex with men and are also injection drug users (MSM IDUs).

Designing Primary Prevention for People Living with HIV

This monograph is based largely on presentations and discussion at the June, 1999 policy forum Primary HIV Prevention: Designing Effective Programs for People Living with HIV. The Forum was hosted by the AIDS Research Institute at UCSF and the National Association of People with AIDS. The Forum was sponsored by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the NIH Office of AIDS Research (OAR), and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Great HIV Prevention Campaigns Are Not Just Born The Convergence of Research and Service in the Making of the “Families Change, Families Grow” Campaign

When the latest HIV prevalence consensus report was released in San Francisco in 1997, statistics revealed increasing HIV rates among gay and bisexual men of color. Among gay men of color, Latinos had the highest rates of HIV infection. In response to this, the STOP AIDS Project decided to heighten their HIV prevention efforts for Latino gay and bisexual men. STOP AIDS convened a meeting for all of the agencies in San Francisco providing HIV prevention services for Latino gay and bisexual men.

Partnership Perspectives

In an effort to equip community and institutional leaders from the health professions with the skills and knowledge to sustain community-campus partnerships, we are pleased to provide you with a copy of Partnership Perspectives-a magazine designed to foster greater awareness of critical issues impacting upon partnerships between communities and health professions schools.

Project Explore

Explore is a nationwide HIV prevention behavioral trial involving nearly 4,300 men who have sex with men.

Afroamericano/as

¿Qué necesítan los afro-americanos en la prevención del VIH? (revisado 8/00) ¿corren el riesgo de contraer el VIH los afro-americanos? Sí. Muchos Afro-Americanos corren alto riesgo de infectarse con VIH, no por razones étnicas o raciales, sino por los comportamientos de riesgo en los que pueden estar participando.

Deaf persons

What Are Deaf Persons’ HIV Prevention Needs? Are deaf persons at risk for HIV? Yes. It is estimated that 7,000 to 26,000 deaf persons in the US are infected with HIV.1 However, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) does not currently collect information on deafness and HIV or AIDS. Maryland was the first state to include questions about deafness in its HIV counseling and testing forms.

Proveedores de salud

¿Pueden los proveedores de salud ayudar en la prevención del VIH? (revisado 4/99)

Sordos

¿Qué necesítan los sordos en la prevención del VIH? ¿están a riesgo de contraer el VIH? Si. Se estima que en los EEUU existen de 7,000 a 26,000 personas carentes del sentido auditivo infectadas con el VIH.1 Sin embargo, los Centros para el Control de Enfermedades (CDC por sus siglas en Inglés) actualmente no recopilan información acerca de los que padecen de sordera y VIH o SIDA.

What are African-Americans’ HIV prevention needs?

What Are African-Americans’ HIV Prevention Needs? revised 9/99 Are African-Americans at risk for HIV? Yes. Many African-Americans are at high risk for HIV infection, not because of their race or ethnicity, but because of the risk behaviors they may engage in.

Adolescentes

¿Qué necesitan los adolescentes en la prevención del VIH? ¿pueden contraer los adolescentes el VIH? Desafortunadamente, sí. Los casos de infección del VIH se incrementan más aceleradamente en los jóvenes. La mitad de todos los casos de VIH se presentan en personas menores de 25 años. De todos los casos de VIH de 1994-1997 en jóvenes de 13-24 años, 44% eran mujeres y 63% Afro-Americanos.

Adolescents

What Are Adolescents’ HIV Prevention Needs? Can adolescents get HIV? Unfortunately, yes. HIV infection is increasing most rapidly among young people. Half of all new infections in the US occur in people younger than 25. From 1994 to 1997, 44% of all HIV infections among young people aged 13-24 occurred among females, and 63% among African-Americans.

Healthcare workers

Can Healthcare Workers Help in HIV Prevention? revised 4/99 Are healthcare providers important in prevention? Yes. Healthcare providers have many opportunities to help foster the behavior changes needed to stem the spread of HIV infection. In the US in 1996, the average adult visited a physician 3 times a year.

Intercambio de jeringas

¿Sirve el intercambio de jeringas? (revisado 4/99) ¿por qué es necesario el intercambio de agujas/jeringas? Más de un millón de personas en los EEUU se inyectan drogas con frecuencia, con un alto costo a la sociedad de más de 50 billones de dólares al sector salud, pérdidas de productividad, accidentes y crímenes.1 Quienes se inyectan drogas se exponen a contraer el VIH o la hepatitis arriesgando así su propia salud, la de las personas con las que comparten agujas/je