ResearchPublications

Training drug treatment patients to conduct peer-based HIV outreach: An ethnographic perspective on peers’ experiences
Abstract

From 2005 to 2008, the Bienvenidos Project trained Puerto Rican patients of New York City and New Jersey Methadone Maintenance Treatment Programs to conduct peer-based community outreach to migrant Puerto Rican drug users to reduce migrants’ HIV risk behaviors. Ethnographic research, including focus groups, individual interviews, and observations, was conducted with a subset of the patients trained as peers (n = 49; 67% male; mean age 40.3 years) to evaluate the self-perceived effects of the intervention. Results of the ethnographic component of this study are summarized. The role of ethnographic methods in implementing and evaluating this kind of intervention is also discussed.

Download PDF

Full citation:
Guarino H, Deren S, Mino M, Kang SY, Shedlin MG (2010).
Training drug treatment patients to conduct peer-based HIV outreach: An ethnographic perspective on peers’ experiences
Substance Use and Misuse, 45 (3), 414-436. doi: 10.3109/10826080903452439. PMCID: PMC2841030.