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AIDS Action Council

What Works in HIV Prevention for Women of Color

2001

References

  1. Amaro, H. (1995). Love, sex and power: Considering women's realities in HIV prevention. American Psychologist, 50, 437-447.

  2. Bandura, A. (1994). Social cognitive theory and exercise of control over HIV infection. In DiClemente R.J. (Ed.). Preventing AIDS: Theories and Methods of Behavioral Interventions. New York: Plenum Press.

  3. Cash, K. (1996). Women Educating Women About HIV Prevention, Women's Experiences: An Interpersonal Perspective (pp. 311). New York: Columbia University Press.

  4. Catania, J., Kegeles, S., and Coates, T. (1990). Toward an understanding of risk behavior: An AIDS risk reduction model. Health Education Quarterly, 17, 53-72.

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  5. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2000). HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report. Midyear edition 12(1).

  6. DiClemente, R. and Wingood, G. (1995). A randomized controlled trial of HIV sexual risk-reduction intervention for young African-American women. Journal of the American Medical Association 274(16), 1271-1276.

  7. Fishbein, M., Middlestadt, S.E. (1989). Using the theory of Reasoned Action as a framework for understanding and changing AIDS-related behaviors. In Wasserheit, J.N. (Ed.) Primary Prevention of AIDS: Psychological Approaches.

  8. Hader, S., Smith, D., Moore, J., and Holmberg, S. (2001). HIV infection in women in the United States: Status at the millennium. Journal of the American Medical Association, 284(9), 1186-1192.

  9. Hogan, K. (1998). Gendered visibilities in black women's AIDS narratives. Gendered Epidemic: Representations of Women in the Age of AIDS (pp.185). New York: Routledge.

  10. Marin, B. and Gomez, C. (1998). HIV Transmission and Prevention in Latino/a Americans. HIV In Site. [On-line]. Available: http://hivinsite.ucsf.edu/InSite.jsp?doc=kb-07-04-11&page=kb-07.

  11. Neal, J., Fleming, P., Green, T., Ward, J. (1997). Trends in heterosexually acquired AIDS in the United States, 1988-1995. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, 14. 465-474.

  12. Ogur, B. (1996). Smothering stereotypes: HIV-positive women (pp. 137-152). In Hewitt, N., O'Barr, J. and Pesbaugh, N. (Eds.) Talking Gender: Public Images, Personal Journeys, and Political Critiques. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.

  13. Prochaska, J., DiClemente, C., and Norcross, J. (1992). In search of how people change. American Psychologist, 47. 1102-1114.

  14. Roberts, L. (1999). Creating a new framework for promoting the health of African-American female adolescents: Beyond risk taking. Journal of the American Medical Women's Association, 54(3). 126-128.

  15. Rogers, E. (1983). Diffusion of Innovations (3 rd ed.). New York: The Free Press.

  16. Rosenstock, I., Stretcher, V., and Becker, M. (1994). The health belief model and HIV risk behavior change. In DiClemente, R. (Ed.) Preventing AIDS: Theories and Methods of Behavioral Interventions. New York: Plenum Press.

  17. Wingood, G. and DiClemente, R. (2000). Application of the theory of gender and power to examine HIV-related exposures, risk factors, and effective interventions for women. Health Education and Behavior 27(5), 539-656.

  18. Wingood, G. and DiClemente, R. (1997). Child sexual abuse, HIV sexual risk, and gender relations of African-American women. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 13,(5), 380-384.

  19. Wingood, G. and DiClemente, R. (1997). Training women living with HIV as co-facilitators in conducting HIV secondary interventions for women. National Conference of Women and HIV. May 4-7, 1997.

This article was provided by AIDS Action Council.
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