| Literature DB >> 12581943 |
Rosanna DeMarco1, Christine Johnsen.
Abstract
For the past 5 years, a successful collaboration of a medical center, a community-based HIV/AIDS service organization, a university school of nursing, and women living with HIV/AIDS in an inner city community resulted in a series of educational programs1 for women living with HIV/AIDS, their family, friends and caregivers. These programs were intended to provide inner-city women who were living with HIV/AIDS with knowledge and new insights from the voices of their peers. Topics focused on their self-care and empowerment so that they could take control of their wellness and their health care while remaining in their community. The efforts made in launching the collaborative educational series created trusting relationships between academic, clinical, and community service agencies, professional caregivers, and the recipients of their care. The most significant contribution belonged to the women living with HIV/AIDS themselves: After the programming they turned their health and life experiences into "action" by planning a research project that will test the efficacy of an intergenerational HIV prevention program for adolescent women of color in their community in the future.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12581943 DOI: 10.1207/S15327655JCHN2001_05
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Health Nurs ISSN: 0737-0016 Impact factor: 0.974