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A Role for Health Communication in the Continuum of HIV Care, Treatment, and Prevention

Tomori, Cecilia; Risher, Kathryn; Limaye, Rupali J.; Van Lith, Lynn M.; Gibbs, Susannah; Smelyanskaya, Marina; Celentano, David D.

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Authors

Cecilia Tomori

Kathryn Risher

Rupali J. Limaye

Lynn M. Van Lith

Susannah Gibbs

Marina Smelyanskaya

David D. Celentano



Abstract

Health communication has played a pivotal role in HIV prevention efforts since the beginning of the epidemic. The recent paradigm of combination prevention, which integrates behavioral, biomedical, and structural interventions, offers new opportunities for employing health communication approaches across the entire continuum of care. We describe key areas where health communication can significantly enhance HIV treatment, care, and prevention, presenting evidence from interventions that include health communication components. These interventions rely primarily on interpersonal communication, especially individual and group counseling, both within and beyond clinical settings to enhance the uptake of and continued engagement in care. Many successful interventions mobilize a network of trained community supporters or accompagnateurs, who provide education, counseling, psychosocial support, treatment supervision, and other pragmatic assistance across the care continuum. Community treatment supporters reduce the burden on overworked medical providers, engage a wider segment of the community, and offer a more sustainable model for supporting people living with HIV. Additionally, mobile technologies are increasingly seen as promising avenues for ongoing cost-effective communication throughout the treatment cascade. A broader range of communication approaches, traditionally employed in HIV prevention efforts, that address community and sociopolitical levels through mass media, school- or workplace-based education, and entertainment modalities may be useful to interventions seeking to address the full care continuum. Future interventions would benefit from development of a framework that maps appropriate communication theories and approaches onto each step of the care continuum to evaluate the efficacy of communication components on treatment outcomes.

Citation

Tomori, C., Risher, K., Limaye, R. J., Van Lith, L. M., Gibbs, S., Smelyanskaya, M., & Celentano, D. D. (2014). A Role for Health Communication in the Continuum of HIV Care, Treatment, and Prevention. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 66(Supplement 3), S306-S310. https://doi.org/10.1097/qai.0000000000000239

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Aug 15, 2014
Publication Date Aug 15, 2014
Deposit Date Sep 13, 2017
Publicly Available Date Oct 17, 2017
Journal Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
Print ISSN 1525-4135
Electronic ISSN 1944-7884
Publisher Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 66
Issue Supplement 3
Pages S306-S310
DOI https://doi.org/10.1097/qai.0000000000000239

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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Copyright Statement
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial No Derivative 3.0 License, which permits downloading and sharing the work provided it is properly cited.
The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially.





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