Cover image for HIV, health, and your community : a guide for action
HIV, health, and your community : a guide for action
Title:
HIV, health, and your community : a guide for action
Author:
Granich, Reuben, 1963-
ISBN:
9780804733519

9780804733502
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, [1999].
Physical Description:
ix, 245 p. : ill., maps ; 27 cm.
Contents:
1. What is HIV? HIV biology -- 2. What are the symptoms of HIV infection? -- 3. Who has HIV? The epidemiology of HIV -- 4. Where are people with HIV? A global picture -- 5. How can people avoid HIV? Counseling about sexual behavior -- 6. Can I get HIV from going to the clinic? The spread of HIV by ways other than sex -- 7. How does the test work? Understanding the HIV test -- 8. Should I take the HIV test? Counseling people about HIV testing -- 9. How can I counsel someone who is different from me? Social and cultural factors that affect the spread of HIV -- 10. How can I help? Supporting a person with HIV -- 11. How can I be a better teacher? Training HIV health workers -- 12. How can we start our own HIV project? Designing HIV prevention programs -- 13. How can we get help to start a project? Funding strategies -- App. Treating advanced HIV disease.
Abstract:
"This book is a comprehensive, easy-to-understand guide for health workers throughout the world, notably in areas with few medical resources. It could be equally useful in a rural village in southern Africa, a major city in Thailand, or a Peace Corps worker's backpack. Designed as a manual for people confronting the HIV epidemic in their communities, it has been written to be easily accessible to those without medical or technical knowledge and without prior training in the prevention of HIV and the care of those with AIDS."--BOOK JACKET. "Topics range from the biology of the virus to designing prevention programs, from the epidemiology of the disease to writing grant proposals. The authors discuss explicitly the risk factors for infection and suggest helpful methods for explaining them and assisting people to change their behavior. They avoid extensive discussions of medical treatments not available to the vast majority of the people in the world who have HIV, focusing instead on public health interventions that are possible in less industrialized settings. However, an appendix aimed at readers with medical training discusses common HIV-related illnesses and their treatment."--BOOK JACKET.
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