Conference Abstract
Raising Community Awareness about Adolescent HIV Risk: Developmental
Strategies to Improve Access To Health Care
Lawrence C. Shulman, Rudy Feudo, Michele G. Shedlin, Sandra Vining
Bridgeport, CT is an old New England industrial city in economic decline,
with high rates of unemployment, poverty, drug use, school dropout, teen pregnancy, STIS,
and a large adolescent group at-risk for HIV. The Greater Bridgeport Adolescent Pregnancy
Program (GBAPP), building on its skills in sex education, pregnancy and STD prevention,
developed a teen-focused early intervention and prevention program for youth at-risk for,
or living with HIV, utilizing an innovative community outreach model to improve access to
care for primarily Black and Hispanic adolescents. This model was adapted from a highly
successful, ongoing Women's Project which focused on the service and personal needs of
street prostitutes, Staff for TOPS (Teen Outreach and Primary Services) were hired with
strong culturally and ethnically sensitive and appropriate outreach experience and strong
ties to "the street". A group of Peer Educators were employed part-time to
complement the outreach team and help build a better bridge of trust among community youth
to encourage participation in TOPS. A range of HIV health care services and prevention
activities were established by the agency and linkages with other providers were developed
for a proposed range of other needed services. A 25 agency Greater Bridgeport HIV/AIDS
Care Consortium existed, but it was a loosely structured, weak deliberative body, not
decisive and not representative of the target population of minority, hard-to-reach street
adolescents. This paper will discuss the developmental strategies for improving linkages
with individual agencies and the AIDS Care Consortium to improve the quantity of services
and access to those HIV care services for the TOPS population. Agency resistance and
responses will be examined. Among the successful efforts have been: a Women's Specialty
Clinic for HIV infected women; an adolescent-specific clinic with major emphasis on HIV;
an HIV Counseling and Testing program on-site at TOPS to provide greater confidentiality
than at the Health Department program which was avoided by adolescents; and parallel
Women's and Adolescents clinics in the South end of town. Issues of achieving a balance
between staff "street smarts" and "professional skills" will be
raised, as will the use of leisure time and recreational activities as a program
recruitment strategy for these teens.
To view the TOPS Project Abstract,
click
here.
Back to Volume
2, Issue 11
Back
to SPNS/Fax Directory
Copyright © 1996-2005 by The Measurement Group LLC. All rights reserved. This may not be current and will not be updated. |