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Individuals were invited to participate in
the consultation after they had been
identified and recommended by stakeholder
groups, professional organizations, and CDC
staff.
Dr. Kevin Fenton, Ms. Janet Cleveland,
and Dr. George Roberts addressed the
participants and provided overviews and
updates on the HIV/AIDS crisis among African
American women, CDC’s Heightened National
Response action strategies, and the
vision for CDC’s overall response to the
crisis and outcomes of programmatic efforts.
In addition, the following individuals
addressed the participants and provided
information on the epidemiological, social,
economic, and co-morbidity factors
associated with the HIV/AIDS crisis among
African American women:
Dr. Madeline Sutton, Division of
HIV/AIDS Prevention, CDC
"The HIV/AIDS Epidemic and Black
Americans"
Dr. Monica Sweeny, New York City
Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
"Social issues and Economic
Factors of the Epidemic"
Mr. David Johnson, Division of
STD Prevention, CDC
"Can You Hear Me Now? Linking STIs
and HIV infection"
Ms. Hope King, Division of Viral
Hepatitis, CDC
"Viral Hepatitis Prevention: Overview
& Integration Projects"
Ms. Danni Lentine, Division of
HIV/AIDS Prevention, CDC
"Triple Stigma: Race, HIV, and Drug
Use"
Dr. Nick DeLuca, Division of TB
Prevention, CDC
"Stop TB in the African-American
Community"
Ms. Frances Ashe-Goins, Office of
Women’s Health, U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services
"The Model Mentorship Program for
Strengthening Organizational Capacity"
Meeting participants were assigned to
four groups, each addressing a different
focus area from the Heightened National
Response action strategies. They then
discussed the key factors contributing to
the HIV/AIDS crisis among African American
women and systematically identified and
categorized areas for consideration and
suggested priorities for their focus area
(for a detailed summary of their
discussions, see the
Discussion Matrix
beginning on page 10).
Participants were asked to address the
following questions for their focus group:
Focus Area 1. Expanding the reach for
prevention services
- What can be done to ensure that
African American women receive
appropriate and effective prevention
services?
Focus Area 2. Increasing opportunities
for diagnosing and treating HIV
- How we can increase the numbers of
African American women who receive HIV
testing?
- What can be done to make sure that
HIV-infected African American women are
linked to effective prevention,
treatment and care services?
Focus Area 3. Developing new, effective
prevention interventions
- What additional research questions
and strategies should be considered in
developing effective interventions for
African American women?
- How can community-based service
providers contribute to the development
of effective risk-reduction
interventions for African American
women?
Focus Area 4. Mobilizing broader
community action
- How can we increase community
support for HIV testing, diagnosis, and
treatment?
- What is the role of African American
women’s organizations in addressing the
HIV prevention needs of African American
women?
In accordance with Dr. Fenton’s charge to
the group to consider co-factors,
co-morbidities, and the need to consolidate
prevention efforts and strategies, the
meeting agenda was modified to facilitate a
large group discussion to identify and
recommend salient strategies for addressing
the HIV/AIDS crisis among African American
women across a broad spectrum (for the
complete meeting agenda, see
Appendix B).
The following question was asked of the
larger group:
- What are the co-morbidities for HIV
and how do they affect African American
women?
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Participant Observations |