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Dive into the research topics where Milagros Sandoval is active.

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Featured researches published by Milagros Sandoval.


Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 2001

Stigmatized drug use, sexual partner concurrency, and other sex risk network and behavior characteristics of 18- to 24-year-old youth in a high-risk neighborhood.

Peter L. Flom; Samuel R. Friedman; Benny J. Kottiri; Alan Neaigus; Richard Curtis; Don C. Des Jarlais; Milagros Sandoval; Jonathan M. Zenilman

Background Sex risks and drug use are related. This relation in youth is described. Goal To determine how stigmatized drug use is related to sexual risk behaviors and network characteristics among youth. Study Design In-person interviews were conducted with both a probability household sample (n = 363) and a targeted, street-recruited sample of cocaine, heroin, crack, or injected drug users (n - 165) comprising 18- to 24-year-olds in an inner city neighborhood. Drug use in the preceding 12 months was scaled hierarchically, lowest to highest social stigma, as none, marijuana, noninjected cocaine, noninjected heroin, crack, and injected drugs. Results Users of the more stigmatized drugs had more sex partners. They were more likely to report a history of concurrent sex partners, sex with someone who also had engaged in sex with a network member, commercial sex work, and unprotected sex. Findings showed crack use and drug injection to be associated more strongly with increased sex risk among women than among men. Conclusions Young users of the more stigmatized drugs are at much greater network and behavior risk for sexually transmitted diseases. Drug use prevention, harm reduction interventions, or both may lower this risk.


Aids and Behavior | 2007

Some data-driven reflections on priorities in AIDS network research.

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

Incarceration, Sex With an STI- or HIV-Infected Partner, and Infection With an STI or HIV in Bushwick, Brooklyn, NY: A Social Network Perspective

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

Keeping it together: Stigma, response, and perception of risk in relationships between drug injectors and crack smokers, and other community residents

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.


AIDS | 2001

Prevalence and correlates of anal sex with men among young adult women in an inner city minority neighborhood

Samuel R. Friedman; Peter L. Flom; Benny J. Kottiri; Alan Neaigus; Milagros Sandoval; Richard Curtis; Jonathan M. Zenilman; Don C. Des Jarlais

In a population-representative sample of 202 18-24-year-old women in a neighborhood with widespread injection of drugs and HIV, 14% reported unprotected anal sex with men in the past year. Independent significant predictors were illegal drug use, having a main partner who takes the lead in deciding what to do during sex, and less self-deception. Having ever had anal sex was associated with having ever been infected with hepatitis B.


Aids and Behavior | 2013

Theory, measurement and hard times: some issues for HIV/AIDS research.

Samuel R. Friedman; Milagros Sandoval; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Diana Rossi; Marya Gwadz; Kirk Dombrowski; Pavlo Smyrnov; Tetyana I. Vasylyeva; Enrique R. Pouget; David C. Perlman

Economic and political instability and related “big events” are widespread throughout the globe. Although they sometimes lead to epidemic HIV outbreaks, sometimes they do not—and we do not understand why. Current behavioural theories do not adequately address these processes, and thus cannot provide optimal guidance for effective intervention. Based in part on a critique of our prior “pathways” model of big events, we suggest that cultural–historical activity theory (CHAT) may provide a useful framework for HIV research in this area. Using CHAT concepts, we also suggest a number of areas in which new measures should be developed to make such research possible.ResumenLa inestabilidad económica y política y los “grandes eventos” asociados con ella están muy extendidas en todo el mundo. Los “grandes eventos” a veces conducen a brotes epidémicos de VIH, y a veces no, y no entendemos por qué. Las actuales teorías del comportamiento no abordan adecuadamente estos procesos, y por lo tanto no pueden proveer una óptima orientación para una efectiva intervención. Basándonos en parte en una crítica a nuestro modelo de las “vías” que se interconectan durante los grandes eventos, sugerimos que la Teoría de la Actividad Histórico-Cultural (CHAT en ingles) puede proporcionar un marco útil para la investigación del VIH en esta área. Utilizamos conceptos de CHAT y también sugerimos una serie de áreas en las que las nuevas medidas se deben desarrollar para hacer posible este tipo de investigación.


Aids Education and Prevention | 2014

The staying safe intervention: training people who inject drugs in strategies to avoid injection-related HCV and HIV infection.

Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Marya Gwadz; Honoria Guarino; Milagros Sandoval; Charles M. Cleland; Ashly E. Jordan; Holly Hagan; Howard Lune; Samuel R. Friedman

This pilot study explores the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of the Staying Safe Intervention, an innovative, strengths-based program to facilitate prevention of infection with the human immunodeficiency virus and with the hepatitis C virus among people who inject drugs (PWID). The authors explored changes in the interventions two primary endpoints: (a) frequency and amount of drug intake, and (b) frequency of risky injection practices. We also explored changes in hypothesized mediators of intervention efficacy: planning skills, motivation/self-efficacy to inject safely, skills to avoid PWID-associated stigma, social support, drug-related withdrawal symptoms, and injection network size and risk norms. A 1-week, five-session intervention (10 hours total) was evaluated using a pre- versus 3-month posttest design. Fifty-one participants completed pre- and posttest assessments. Participants reported significant reductions in drug intake and injection-related risk behavior. Participants also reported significant increases in planning skills, motivation/self-efficacy, and stigma management strategies, while reducing their exposure to drug withdrawal episodes and risky injection networks.


Substance Use & Misuse | 2011

Symbiotic Goals and the Prevention of Blood-Borne Viruses Among Injection Drug Users

Samuel R. Friedman; Milagros Sandoval; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Peter Meylakhs; Don C. Des Jarlais

A positive-deviance control–case life history study of injection drug users (IDUs) in New York City who had injected drugs for 8–15 years compared 21 IDUs who were antibody negative for both HIV and hepatitis C with 3 infected with both viruses and 11 infected with hepatitis C virus but not HIV. Eligible subjects were referred from other research studies and from community organizations that conduct testing for HIV and hepatitis C virus. Data were collected during 2005–2008 and were analyzed using life history and grounded theory approaches. They support grounded hypotheses that IDUs who are able to attain symbiotic goals like avoiding withdrawal and maintaining social support are assisted thereby in remaining uninfected with HIV or hepatitis C. These hypotheses should be tested using cohort studies and prevention trials to see if helping IDUs attain symbiotic goals reduces infection risk. The studys limitations are noted.


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2008

Relative prevalence of different sexually transmitted infections in HIV-discordant sexual partnerships: data from a risk network study in a high-risk New York neighbourhood

Samuel R. Friedman; Melissa Bolyard; Milagros Sandoval; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Carey Maslow; Jonathan M. Zenilman

Objectives: To determine infection patterns of sexually transmitted infections that facilitate HIV transmission among HIV-discordant couples. Methods: 112 initial respondents were recruited in an impoverished neighbourhood of Brooklyn, New York. Their sexual (and injection) partners were recruited in up to four additional network sampling waves for a final sample of 465 persons aged 18 years or older. After separate informed consent had been obtained, blood and urine were collected and tested for HIV, type-specific antibodies to herpes simplex virus (HSV-2), syphilis, chlamydia and gonorrhoea. Results: Of 30 HIV-discordant partnerships, five were same-sex male partnerships and 25 were opposite-sex partnerships. No subjects tested positive for syphilis or gonorrhoea. Two couples were chlamydia-discordant. For HSV-2, 16 couples were double-positive, eight discordant, four double-negative, and two comprised a HSV-2-negative with a partner with missing herpes data. Conclusions: HSV-2 was present in 83% of the HIV-discordant couples, chlamydia in 7%, and syphilis and gonorrhoea in none. HSV-2 is probably more important for HIV transmission than bacterial sexually transmitted diseases because it is more widespread. Even given the limited generalisability of this community-based sample, there seems to be an important HIV-prevention role for herpes detection and prevention activities in places where HIV-infected people are likely to be encountered, including sexually transmitted disease clinics, HIV counselling and testing programmes, prisons, needle exchanges, and drug abuse treatment programmes. The effects of HSV-suppressive therapy in highly impacted groups should also be investigated.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2002

Consistent condom use among drug-using youth in a high HIV-risk neighbourhood.

S. R. Friedman; Peter L. Flom; Benny J. Kottiri; Alan Neaigus; Milagros Sandoval; J. Fuld; Richard Curtis; Jonathan M. Zenilman; Don C. Des Jarlais

Abstract The objectives of this study were to determine predictors of consistent condom use in heterosexual relationships of young adults who use hard drugs in a neigbourhood with widespread drug-use-connected HIV. We interviewed 196 18–24 year olds who injected drugs or used heroin, cocaine or crack in the prior year and lived in the Bushwick neighbourhood of New York City.Interviews covered sociodemographics, substance use and sexual networks. The unit of analysis is the relationship; the dependent variable measures consistent condom use over the prior 30 days in a given relationship. Consistent condom use was reported in 26% of 377 non-commercial relationships and in all of 22 commercial relationships. Using multiple logistic regression, consistent condom use in non-commercial relationships was more likely in relationships that are not ‘very close’; for men (but not women) with peers whose norms are more favourable to condom use; and for subjects who had concurrent sex partners in the last 12 months. In conclusion, we found that: (1) the lack of relationship between the peer norms of drug-using women and their condom use suggests they may have little control over condom use in their relationships—programmes should attempt to empower young women drug users and to develop ways for their peers to influence the men in their lives; (2) epidemiologically, the positive association of concurrency to consistent condom use suggests that condom use may be restricting HIV spread through the community—the presence of consistent condom use in all of the commercial sexual relationships also may restrict HIVspread; (3) prevention efforts should attempt to change peer cultures as a way to develop self-sustaining risk reduction. These changes should include changes in gender roles and power relations.

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Samuel R. Friedman

National Development and Research Institutes

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Pedro Mateu-Gelabert

National Development and Research Institutes

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Peter L. Flom

National Development and Research Institutes

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Enrique R. Pouget

National Development and Research Institutes

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Diana Rossi

University of Buenos Aires

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Alan Neaigus

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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Benny J. Kottiri

National Development and Research Institutes

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Don C. Des Jarlais

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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