HIV / AIDS: Prevention and Health Communication

·
· Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Ebook
240
Pages
Eligible

About this ebook

Stating that HIV/AIDS is a colossal public health problem is a vast understatement. Its effects extend to all reaches of the globe and its toll is enormous. , The most recent statistics on HIV infections, people living with HIV/AIDS, and AIDS-related deaths are jolting.

Current realities, historical data, and future projections clearly indicate that much more action is needed to prevent new infections and curb the effects of HIV/AIDS. Rather than a single global strategy for HIV/AIDS prevention, programs must be developed and implemented with an awareness of local, regional, national, and international conditions.

Our hope for this book is that additional insight into HIV/AIDS prevention can be garnered and the ideas generated here will spur new efforts and improve existing ones. The chapters in this book explore how health communication researchers and practitioners continue to play critical roles in lessening the spread of HIV and the devastating impacts of HIV/AIDS locally, regionally, and globally. The book’s three sections—general prevention, global context, and specific contexts—address a range of topics. Chapters range from formative research to message construction and processing (e.g., difficulties in communicating statistical information, understanding risk messages), address geographical regions from Africa and Asia to Central America and the Caribbean, and examine specific contexts from university students to later-life adults as well as African Americans and persons living with HIV/AIDS. Because there is currently neither a cure for HIV/AIDS nor a vaccine to prohibit infection, the concluding chapter reinforces the book’s main premises—behavior change as the key to prevention and health communication work as crucial to achieving such change.

About the author

Margaret U. D’Silva, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Louisville and Associate Director of the university’s Institute for Intercultural Communication. Her academic specialties are in intercultural, media, and health communication.

Joy L. Hart, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Louisville. Her research and teaching interests center in organizational and health communication.

Kandi L. Walker, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Louisville. She teaches and conducts research on health, family, and interpersonal communication.

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