HIV/AIDS continues to be a devastating epidemic with African American communities carrying the brunt of the impact. Despite extensive biobehavioral research, current strategies have not resulted in significantly decreasing HIV/AIDS cases among African Americans. The next generation of HIV prevention and risk reduction interventions must move beyond basic sex education and condom use and availability. Successful interventions targeting African Americans must optimize strategies that integrate socio-cultural factors and address institutional and historical barriers that hinder or support HIV risk reduction behaviors. Community-based participatory research to decrease the HIV/AIDS disparity by building community capacity and infrastructure and...
African American women are bearing an excess burden of HIV/AIDS, becoming infected at a rate 25 time...
The primary period of the HIV infection along with cultural behaviors have public health implication...
There is growing optimism in the global health community that the HIV epidemic can be halted. After ...
HIV/AIDS continues to be a devastating epidemic with African American communities carrying the brunt...
Despite substantial federal resources spent on HIV prevention, research, treatment, and care, as wel...
African Americans experience HIV and AIDS at a rate 10 times greater than the U.S. White population....
Human Immunodeficiency Virus infection (HIV) has reached alarming proportions in the African America...
Despite advances in HIV prevention and care, African Americans and Latino Americans remain at much h...
In 1998, community leaders prompted members of the Black and Hispanic Congressional Caucuses to urge...
The HIV/AIDS epidemic continues to affect the lives of many, with African American women being uniqu...
Background: The purpose of this paper was to review the HIV/AIDS interventions conducted among heter...
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated in 2005 that 46% of African American men wh...
The HIV epidemic continues to disproportionately affect ethnic minority youth. These disconcerting h...
Nationally, HIV/AIDS transmission rates are rising in African American communities while decreasing ...
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) surfaced in the United States more than twenty years ago. The fir...
African American women are bearing an excess burden of HIV/AIDS, becoming infected at a rate 25 time...
The primary period of the HIV infection along with cultural behaviors have public health implication...
There is growing optimism in the global health community that the HIV epidemic can be halted. After ...
HIV/AIDS continues to be a devastating epidemic with African American communities carrying the brunt...
Despite substantial federal resources spent on HIV prevention, research, treatment, and care, as wel...
African Americans experience HIV and AIDS at a rate 10 times greater than the U.S. White population....
Human Immunodeficiency Virus infection (HIV) has reached alarming proportions in the African America...
Despite advances in HIV prevention and care, African Americans and Latino Americans remain at much h...
In 1998, community leaders prompted members of the Black and Hispanic Congressional Caucuses to urge...
The HIV/AIDS epidemic continues to affect the lives of many, with African American women being uniqu...
Background: The purpose of this paper was to review the HIV/AIDS interventions conducted among heter...
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated in 2005 that 46% of African American men wh...
The HIV epidemic continues to disproportionately affect ethnic minority youth. These disconcerting h...
Nationally, HIV/AIDS transmission rates are rising in African American communities while decreasing ...
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) surfaced in the United States more than twenty years ago. The fir...
African American women are bearing an excess burden of HIV/AIDS, becoming infected at a rate 25 time...
The primary period of the HIV infection along with cultural behaviors have public health implication...
There is growing optimism in the global health community that the HIV epidemic can be halted. After ...