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Transitions
Volume 14, No. 3,
April 2002
This Transitions is
also available in [PDF] format.
HIV Prevention
Community Planning
Kayla Jackson, MPA, Director, HIV/STD Prevention Programs
Across the United States in 1994, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention implemented HIV
prevention community
planning to deal with the changing HIV epidemic and the increasingly
diverse communities affected by the epidemic. Community planning enables
community members to come together to design local plans that best represent
the needs of local populations at risk for or affected by HIV. HIV prevention
community planning is mandatory in the 65 state, territorial, and local
health departments that receive funds from the federal government for
HIV interventions.
Community planning is based on a set of core principles—parity,
inclusion, and representation. These principles ensure that all community
planning group
(CPG) members have an equal voice in voting and making decisions, that the views
and needs of all affected groups are involved in the process, and that representatives
truly reflect communities' values,
norms, and behaviors. Members of CPGs are "persons who reflect the characteristics
of the current and projected epidemic in that jurisdiction."1 HIV
prevention community planning has the following core objectives:
- Fostering
openness and participation in the community planning
process
- Ensuring
that the CPG reflects the diversity of the epidemic in
the jurisdiction and that the process includes expertise
in epidemiology, behavioral science, health planning,
and evaluation
- Determining
priority HIV prevention needs, based on each jurisdiction's
unique, epidemiological profile and on an HIV prevention
needs assessment
- Prioritizing
interventions, based on explicit considerations of needs,
outcome effectiveness, cost effectiveness, theory (from
social and behavioral science), and community norms and
values
- Fostering
strong, logical links between the community planning
process and its plans applications for funding and allocation
of CDC HIV prevention resources.2
HIV prevention community
planning has achieved some real successes since 1994, including:
- Developing
planning groups at the local, regional, and state levels
- Opening
up the planning process to more people
- Recruiting
diverse members that reflect the epidemic
- Improving
relationships between health departments and those at
risk
- Changing
the direction of prevention spending
- Affecting
prevention activities (e.g., targeting programs geographically
and in recognition of different behaviors and cultures
within at-risk populations).2
Despite these successes,
youth's representation on CPGs is low. Only about five percent of CPG
members are under the age of 24,2 even
though young people under the age of 25 comprise half of the new HIV
infections in the United States.3 Youth,
especially youth of color and gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
youth, are disproportionately affected by HIV.
There are many potential barriers to including youth meaningfully in the community
planning process. Many of the attitudes and assumptions of both youth and adults
make it difficult for them to work together in partnership. Institutional barriers,
such as time constraints, meeting times, financial resources, and transportation,
make it difficult for young people to become involved in an adult-oriented
process. Commitment to forming effective youth-adult partnerships and willingness
to compromise in order to create a more youth-friendly environment are requirements
for facilitating true youth involvement.
In order to achieve parity, inclusion, and representation, youth
must be actively and meaningfully involved in the community planning
process. Bringing youth—especially
those at highest risk—to the table is also necessary as an invaluable
component of the entire community planning process. Young people provide fresh
perspectives and relevant information about the needs of youth. Youth provide
energy and enthusiasm as well as appropriate and pertinent ideas for planning.
The most logical way to strengthen and promote HIV prevention among youth in
a community is by having young people from that community engaged in the planning
of prevention activities.
References:
- Centers for
Disease Control & Prevention. Guidance: HIV Prevention
Community Planning for HIV Prevention Cooperative Agreement
Recipients. Atlanta, GA: The Centers, National Center
for HIV, STD & TB Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS
Prevention, [n.d.].
- Centers for
Disease Control & Prevention. HIV Prevention
Community Planning: Successes and Challenges. Atlanta,
GA: The Centers, National Center for HIV, STD, & TB
Prevention, Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, 1998.
- Office of
National AIDS Policy. Youth and HIV/AIDS 2000: A
New American Agenda. Washington, DC: White House,
2000.
Transitions (ISSN 1097-1254) © 2002, is a quarterly publication of Advocates for Youth—Helping young people make safe and responsible decisions about sex. For permission to reprint, contact Transitions' editor at 202.419.3420.
Editor: Sue Alford
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