Melissa Bolyard
Emory University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Melissa Bolyard.
Aids and Behavior | 2007
Samuel R. Friedman; Melissa Bolyard; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Paula Goltzman; María Pía Pawlowicz; Dhan Zunino Singh; Graciela Touzé; Diana Rossi; Carey Maslow; Milagros Sandoval; Peter L. Flom
Risk networks can transmit HIV or other infections; social networks can transmit social influence and thus help shape norms and behaviors. This primarily-theoretical paper starts with a review of network concepts, and then presents data from a New York network study to study patterns of sexual and injection linkages among IDUs and other drug users and nonusers, men who have sex with men, women who have sex with women, other men and other women in a high-risk community and the distribution of HIV, sex at group sex events, and health intravention behaviors in this network. It then discusses how risk network microstructures might influence HIV epidemics and urban vulnerability to epidemics; what social and other forces (such as “Big Events” like wars or ecological disasters) might shape networks and their associated norms, intraventions, practices and behaviors; and how network theory and research have and may continue to contribute to developing interventions against HIV epidemics.
American Journal of Public Health | 2011
Marina R. Khan; Matthew W. Epperson; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Melissa Bolyard; Milagros Sandoval; Samuel R. Friedman
OBJECTIVES We examined the link between incarceration and sexually transmitted infection (STI), including HIV, from a social network perspective. METHODS We used data collected during a social network study conducted in Brooklyn, NY (n = 343), to measure associations between incarceration and infection with herpes simplex virus-2, chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis or HIV and sex with an infected partner, adjusting for characteristics of respondents and their sex partners. RESULTS Infection with an STI or HIV was associated with incarceration of less than 1 year (adjusted prevalence ratio [PR] = 1.33; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.01, 1.76) and 1 year or longer (adjusted PR = 1.37; 95% CI = 1.08, 1.74). Sex in the past 3 months with an infected partner was associated with sex in the past 3 months with 1 partner (adjusted PR = 1.42; 95% CI = 1.12, 1.79) and with 2 or more partners (adjusted PR = 1.85; 95% CI = 1.43, 2.38) who had ever been incarcerated. CONCLUSIONS The results highlight the need for STI and HIV treatment and prevention for current and former prisoners and provide preliminary evidence to suggest that incarceration may influence STI and HIV, possibly because incarceration increases the risk of sex with infected partners.
Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2005
Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Carey Maslow; Peter L. Flom; Milagros Sandoval; Melissa Bolyard; S. R. Friedman
Abstract Sexual relations between drug injectors (IDUs) and crack smokers (CS), and non-drug users are a major means of HIV spread to the broader population. However there is little literature describing community processes that regulate sexual and social partnerships among these groups. We describe these relationships in Bushwick, a low-income, mainly Latino neighbourhood in Brooklyn, NY. In this community, IDU and CS are heavily stigmatized, both by non-users and by some users. Known IDU/CS may find it harder to start and maintain social and sexual relationships, and to get jobs or support. Partially as a result of this stigma, IDU/CS attempt to ‘keep it together’ and hide either their drug use or its extent from other residents. Nevertheless, other residents believe, sometimes falsely, that they can distinguish users from nonusers. We describe some potential negative consequences of these beliefs and interactions, including their effects on risk for HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases.
Sahara J-journal of Social Aspects of Hiv-aids | 2008
Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Melissa Bolyard; Carey Maslow; Milagros Sandoval; Peter L. Flom; Samuel R. Friedman
People in high-risk neighbourhoods try to protect their friends, neighbours, relatives and others from the social and physical risks associated with sex and drug use. This paper develops and validates a community-grounded questionnaire to measure such ‘intravention’ (health-directed efforts to protect others). An initial ethnography, including life-history interviews and focus groups, explored the forms of intravention activities engaged in by residents of Bushwick (a high-risk New York City neighbourhood). Grassroots categories of intraventions were derived and questions developed to ask about such behaviours. Face validity and adequacy of the questions were assessed by independent experts. Pre-testing was conducted, and reliability and validity were assessed. An instrument including 110 intravention items was administered to 57 community-recruited residents. Analysis focused on 57 items in 11 domain-specific subscale. All subscales had good to very good reliability; Cronbachs alpha ranged from .81 to .95. The subscales evidenced both convergent and discriminant validity. Although further testing of this instrument on additional populations is clearly warranted, this intravention instrument seems valid and reliable. It can be used by researchers in comparative and longitudinal studies of the causes, prevalence and affects of different intravention activities in communities. It can benefit public health practitioners by helping them understand the environments in which they are intervening and by helping them find ways to cooperate with local neighbourhood-level health activists.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2009
Maria R. Khan; Melissa Bolyard; Milagros Sandoval; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Beatrice Krauss; Sevgi O. Aral; Samuel R. Friedman
Introduction:The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advise repeat HIV testing for partners of HIV-infected persons; injection drug users and their sex partners; individuals with recent multiple partnerships and their sex partners; those involved in sex trade; and men who have sex with men. Additional social and behavioral variables may be useful for identifying priority populations. Methods:We analyzed data collected during a social network study conducted in a Brooklyn, NY, neighborhood to identify social and behavioral characteristics of respondents (N = 343) involved in HIV-discordant, herpes simplex virus-2- discordant, and chlamydia-discordant partnerships. Results:HIV partnership discordance was associated with injection drug use but was generally not associated with sexual behaviors including multiple partnerships and sex trade. herpes simplex virus-2 and chlamydia partnership discordance were associated with multiple partnerships, sex trade, and same sex partnership history. Additional correlates of sexually transmitted infection (STI)/HIV-discordant partnerships included older age (≥25 years), noninjection drug use, and incarceration history. Analyses suggested that screening tools composed of CDC-recommended sexual risk and injection drug indicators plus indicators of older age, noninjection drug use, and incarceration were more effective in identifying STI/HIV priority populations than tools composed of CDC indicators alone. Conclusions:Screening tools that include social and behavioral indicators may improve STI/HIV case-finding effectiveness.
Drugs-education Prevention and Policy | 2010
María Pía Pawlowicz; Dhan Zunino Singh; Diana Rossi; Graciela Touzé; Guido Wolman; Melissa Bolyard; Milagros Sandoval; Peter L. Flom; Pedro Mateu Gelabert; Samuel R. Friedman
Aims: To determine if measures of drug use risk, sexual risk, external norms and internalized norms developed for impoverished neighbourhoods of New York are usable in similar neighbourhoods of Buenos Aires and have similar associations with each other in the two cities despite the many cultural, social, economic and political differences between these localities. Methods: In 2003–2004, 240 current non-injection drug users (IDUs) and 63 current IDUs, aged 21–35 years, were interviewed in poor neighbourhoods of the Southern Metropolitan Area of Buenos Aires about their drug use, sexual behaviours, internalized norms and external norms (actual and perceived social pressures from others) using measures developed in New York (Flom, Friedman, Benny, & Curtis, 2001a, Flom, et al., ; Flom, Friedman, Jose, Neaigus, & Curtis, 2001c). Analyses studied associations between a hierarchical scale of drug use risk and the other variables. Results: The hierarchical risk scale of drug use was associated with sexual risk behaviours; with external norms towards drug injection and sex with drug injectors, and internalized norms about social distance from drug injectors. Conclusions: The hierarchical drug use risk scale and the measures of external norms had relationships similar to those found in the earlier studies in New York City. This supports the ideas that these measures may have a degree of cross-cultural applicability.
Aids Education and Prevention | 2004
Samuel R. Friedman; Carey Maslow; Melissa Bolyard; Milagros Sandoval; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Alan Neaigus
American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2007
Samuel R. Friedman; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Richard Curtis; Carey Maslow; Melissa Bolyard; Milagros Sandoval; Peter L. Flom
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2008
Samuel R. Friedman; Melissa Bolyard; Maria R. Khan; Carey Maslow; Milagros Sandoval; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Beatrice Krauss; Sevgi O. Aral
Harm Reduction Journal | 2011
Diana Rossi; Dhan Zunino Singh; María Pía Pawlowicz; Graciela Touzé; Melissa Bolyard; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Milagros Sandoval; Samuel R. Friedman