Claudio Gruber Mann
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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Featured researches published by Claudio Gruber Mann.
Aids and Behavior | 2007
Milton L. Wainberg; Karen McKinnon; Paulo Mattos; Diana de Souza Pinto; Claudio Gruber Mann; Claudia Simone dos Santos de Oliveira; Suely Broxado de Oliveira; Robert H. Remien; Katherine S. Elkington; Francine Cournos; Prissma
As in other countries worldwide, adults with severe mental illness in Brazil have elevated rates of HIV infection relative to the general population. However, no HIV prevention interventions have been tested for efficacy with psychiatric patients in Brazil. We conducted participatory research with local providers, community leaders, patient advocates, and patients using an intervention adaptation process designed to balance fidelity to efficacious interventions developed elsewhere with fit to a new context and culture. Our process for adapting these interventions comprised four steps: (1) optimizing fidelity; (2) optimizing fit; (3) balancing fidelity and fit; and (4) pilot testing and refining the intervention. This paper describes how these steps were carried out to produce a Brazilian HIV prevention intervention for people with severe mental illness. Our process may serve as a model for adapting existing efficacious interventions to new groups and cultures, whether at a local, national, or international level.
World Psychiatry | 2008
Milton L. Wainberg; Karen McKinnon; Katherine S. Elkington; Paulo Mattos; Claudio Gruber Mann; Diana de Souza Pinto; Laura L. Otto-Salaj; Francine Cournos
We conducted the first study to examine rates of sexual activity, sexual risk behaviors, sexual protective behaviors, injection drug use (IDU), needle sharing, and knowledge about HIV/AIDS among outpatients with severe mental illness (SMI) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Using a measure with demonstrated reliability, we found that 42% of 98 patients engaged in vaginal or anal sex within the past three months. Comorbid substance use disorder was significantly associated with sexual activity. Only 22% of sexually active patients used condoms consistently, despite having better HIV knowledge than those who were sexually abstinent. Overall, 45% of patients reported not engaging in any HIV protective behaviors. There were no reports of drug injection. Adults with SMI in Brazil are in need of efficacious HIV prevention programs and policies that can sustain these programs within mental health treatment settings.
Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2007
Diana de Souza Pinto; Claudio Gruber Mann; Milton L. Wainberg; Paulo Mattos; Suely Broxado de Oliveira
This paper presents data from the ethnographic based formative phase of the Interdisciplinary Project on Sexuality, Mental Health, and AIDS (PRISSMA), sponsored by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) and carried out in two psychiatric institutions in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Results from ethnographic observations, focus groups, and key informant interviews with different groups of mental health care providers and day hospital and outpatient mental health clients regarding conceptions of sexuality and HIV vulnerability are described. The results suggest a diversity of notions about sexuality by both groups and point out the high HIV sexual risk in this psychiatric population. This formative phase has served as the basis for the cultural adaptation and creation of a Brazilian intervention for HIV prevention in the severely mentally ill, the feasibility of which has been successfully evaluated in the pilot phase.
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal | 2016
Milton L. Wainberg; Francine Cournos; Melanie M. Wall; Andrea Norcini Pala; Claudio Gruber Mann; Diana de Souza Pinto; Veronica Pinho; Karen McKinnon
OBJECTIVE The majority of people in psychiatric care worldwide are sexually active, and studies have revealed sharply elevated rates of HIV infection in that group compared with the general population. Recovery-oriented treatment does not routinely address sexuality. We examined the relationship between gender, severe mental illness diagnosis, and stigma experiences related to sexuality among people in psychiatric outpatient care. METHOD Sexually active adults attending 8 public outpatient psychiatric clinics in Rio de Janeiro (N = 641) were interviewed for psychiatric diagnosis and stigma experiences. Stigma mechanisms well-established in the literature but not previously examined in relation to sexuality were measured with the Mental Illness Sex Stigma Questionnaire, a 27-item interview about stigma in sexual situations and activities. RESULTS Experiences of stigma were reported by a majority of participants for 48% of questionnaire items. Most people reported supportive attitudes toward their sexuality from providers and family members. Those with severe mental illness diagnoses showed greater stigma on individual discrimination and structural stigma mechanisms than did those with nonsevere mental illness diagnoses, whereas there was no difference on the social psychological processes (internalized stigma) mechanism. Regardless of diagnosis or gender, a majority of participants devalued themselves as sexual partners. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE Adults in psychiatric outpatient care frequently reported stigma experiences related to aspects of their sexual lives. From the perspectives of both HIV prevention and recovery from mental illness, examinations of the consequences of stigma in the sexual lives of people in psychiatric care and improving their measurement would have wide applicability. (PsycINFO Database Record
Social Science & Medicine | 2007
Milton L. Wainberg; M. Alfredo González; Karen McKinnon; Katherine S. Elkington; Diana de Souza Pinto; Claudio Gruber Mann; Paulo Mattos
Community Mental Health Journal | 2010
Katherine S. Elkington; Karen McKinnon; Claudio Gruber Mann; Pamela Y. Collins; Cheng-Shiun Leu; Milton L. Wainberg
Archive | 2004
Claudio Gruber Mann; Suely Broxado de Oliveira; Brasil. Ministerio da Saude. Programa Nacional de Dst e Aids
Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2018
Claudio Gruber Mann; Simone Monteiro
The Routledge handbook of language and health communication, 2014, ISBN 978-0-415-67043-2, págs. 389-406 | 2014
Branca Telles Ribeiro; Diana de Souza Pinto; Claudio Gruber Mann
Archive | 2014
Branca Telles Ribeiro; Diana de Souza Pinto; Claudio Gruber Mann