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Acquisition and review of non-U.S.-based HIV risk reduction intervention studies.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome 2002;30(Suppl 1):S51-S50.
Eke A, Peersman G, Semaan S, Hylton K, Kiiti N, Sweat MD.
Abstract
In response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, many governments and nongovernmental
organizations have supported numerous HIV prevention intervention studies
in both the United States and in other countries. To understand which intervention
approaches have worked outside the United States, the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention extended the scope of its HIV/AIDS Prevention Research
Synthesis (PRS) project to include non-U.S.-based studies. We describe briefly
the PRS experience with the challenges of acquiring and reviewing those studies,
and some of the specialized efforts to find them. The ultimate goals of the
PRS project related to international prevention research are to include all
available reports of non-U.S.-based studies in the PRS database and to provide
comprehensive reviews of those studies. The findings of the reviews would
not only highlight common themes of effectiveness or research gaps in the
international arena but could also be useful for improving prevention research
and programs in the United States.