Literature DB >> 20528130

Taking It to the Pews: a CBPR-guided HIV awareness and screening project with black churches.

Jannette Berkley-Patton1, Carole Bowe-Thompson, Andrea Bradley-Ewing, Starlyn Hawes, Erin Moore, Eric Williams, David Martinez, Kathy Goggin.   

Abstract

Utilizing a community-based participatory research (CBPR) approach is a potentially effective strategy for exploring the development, implementation, and evaluation of HIV interventions in African American churches. This CBPR-guided study describes a church-based HIV awareness and screening intervention (Taking It to the Pews [TIPS]) that fully involved African American church leaders in all phases of the research project. Findings from the implementation and evaluation phases indicated that church leaders delivered TIPS Tool Kit activities on an ongoing basis (about twice a month) over a 9-month period. TIPS church members were highly exposed to TIPS activities (e.g., 91% reported receiving HIV educational brochures, 84% heard a sermon about HIV). Most (87%) believed that the church should talk about HIV, and 77% believed that the church should offer HIV screening. These findings suggest that implementing an HIV intervention in Black church settings is achievable, particularly when a CBPR approach is used.

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Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20528130      PMCID: PMC3924866          DOI: 10.1521/aeap.2010.22.3.218

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Educ Prev        ISSN: 0899-9546


  29 in total

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Authors: 
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  73 in total

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4.  Curriculum development to increase minority research literacy for HIV prevention research: a CBPR approach.

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Review 7.  HIV/AIDS prevention, faith, and spirituality among black/African American and Latino communities in the United States: strengthening scientific faith-based efforts to shift the course of the epidemic and reduce HIV-related health disparities.

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8.  Beliefs About Sex and Parent-Child-Church Sex Communication Among Church-Based African American Youth.

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9.  Correlates of HIV testing among African American and Latino church congregants: the role of HIV stigmatizing attitudes and discussions about HIV.

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