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Working with Families in the Era of HIV/AIDS
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Working with Families in the Era of HIV/AIDS

Edited by:
  • Willo Pequegnat - National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland
  • Jose Szapocznik - University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, USA, University of Miami, Coral Gables, USA

May 2000 | 344 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
The purpose of this book is to encourage professionals to become involved in family-oriented services to prevent the spread of HIV and its consequences and to provide examples of strategies for mobilizing family resources in the prevention and adaptation to HIV and AIDS. The members of the NIMH Consortium on Families and HIV/AIDS have prepared these chapters building on their research and practice experience. Together some of the nation's most capable behavioral prevention and treatment scientists have developed these prevention programs based on sound scientific principles and are currently testing them in rigorous controlled trials in communities across the country. While these interventions have not yet been demonstrated to be effective, they have received rigorous peer review by independent scientists conducted under the auspices of the NIMH, and were considered worthy of research support. This book focuses on populations were HIV infection is now quickly spreading, and yet relatively little is know about family interventions with these populations. The prevention programs address the spectrum of programs to prevent the spread of HIV and its consequences. The HIV prevention programs are intended to promote greater responsibility in general, and thus encourage healthier lifestyles with respect to drug and sexual behavior among family members. Although not exclusively, a large proportion of the programs presented in this book were designed for African American populations and address the Prevention of the spread of HIV/AIDS and its consequences. With that caveat, however, it should be noted that these interventions can also be adapted for use with other cultural groups, other chronic diseases, STDs and multiple family configurations.

Nancy Boyd-Franklin
Foreword
Willo Pequegnat
Prologue
 
PART ONE: OVERVIEW OF FAMILY AND HIV/AIDS
Willo Pequegnat and José Szapocznik
The Role of Families in Preventing and Adapting to HIV/AIDS
Issues and Answers

 
James H Bray and Ernest Frugé
Assessment and Evaluation of HIV/AIDS Families
Applications to Prevention and Care

 
Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus and Noelle R Leonard
Training Facilitators to Deliver HIV Manual-Based Interventions to Families
 
PART TWO: PREVENTION - PREVENTING THE SPREAD OF HIV INFECTION
Mary McKernan McKay et al
Preventing HIV Risk Exposure in Urban Communities
The CHAMP Family Program

 
Beatrice J Krauss et al
Saving Our Children from a Silent Epidemic
The PATH Program for Parents and Pre-Adolescents

 
Colleen Dilorio et al
Keepin' It R.E.A.L.
A Mother-Adolescent HIV Prevention Program

 
Loretta Sweet Jemmott et al
Strengthening the Bond
The Mother-Son Health Promotion Project

 
 
PART THREE: ADAPTING - PREVENTING CONSEQUENCES OF HIV INFECTION AND AIDS
Laurie J Bauman et al
Who Will Care for Me? Planning the Future Care and Custody of Children Orphaned by HIV/AIDS
Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus and Margarita Lightfoot
Helping Adolescents and Parents with AIDS to Cope Effectively with Daily Life
Bruce D Rapkin et al
The Family Health Project
Strengthening Family Problem Solving in Families Affected by AIDS to Mobilize Systems of Support

 
Victoria Behar Mitrani et al
Structural Ecosystems Therapy HIV + African American Women
Gina M Wingood and Ralph J DiClemente
The WiLLOW Program
Mobilizing Social Networks of Women Living with HIV to Enhance Coping and Reduce Sexual Risk Behaviors

 

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