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Dive into the research topics where Thomas M. Painter is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas M. Painter.


Aids and Behavior | 2008

Connecting The Dots: When the Risks of HIV/STD Infection Appear High But the Burden of Infection Is Not Known—The Case of Male Latino Migrants in the Southern United States

Thomas M. Painter

Between 1990 and 2000, the number of Latinos in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee, states that had no or small Latino populations in 1990, increased by more than 300% on average. Several of these states (referred to as rapid growth states) have high AIDS/STD case rates. Compared to Latinos in states with well-established Latino populations and Latinos nationwide, those in rapid growth states are more often males, young, foreign-born, and recent arrivals who travel without females. The typical Latino in rapid growth states is a young male migrant. Although these migrants may be at risk of HIV/STD infection, little is known about the risk factors that affect them. To clarify this picture, a database search was conducted to identify studies of HIV/STD infection and/or risk factors among rural and urban-based Latino migrants in the six rapid growth states. This qualitative review examines ten studies that were conducted in Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Five of the studies screened for HIV and/or syphilis infection and provide some information on risk factors; five studies describe risk factors only. Most of those studies that describe risk factors provide evidence that male Latino migrants in rural and urban settings of rapid growth states are vulnerable to HIV/STD infection through heterosexual contacts. However, many of the studies fail to provide sufficient information on other risk factors, and all but one of the studies that screened migrants for HIV or STD infection were conducted between 1988 and 1991. There is an urgent need for updated information on HIV/STD infection and the social-behavioral and situational risk factors that affect male Latino migrants in rapid growth states of the South.


Aids and Behavior | 2010

Efficacy of a Single-Session HIV Prevention Intervention for Black Women: A Group Randomized Controlled Trial

Dázon Dixon Diallo; Trent Wade Moore; Paulyne M. Ngalame; Lisa Diane White; Jeffrey H. Herbst; Thomas M. Painter

SisterLove Inc., a community-based organization (CBO) in Atlanta, Georgia, evaluated the efficacy of its highly interactive, single-session HIV prevention intervention for black women, the Healthy Love Workshop (HLW). HLW is delivered to pre-existing groups of women (e.g., friends, sororities) in settings of their choosing. Eligible groups of women were randomly assigned to receive the intervention (15 groups; 161 women) or a comparison workshop (15 groups; 152 women). Behavioral assessments were conducted at baseline and at 3- and 6-month follow-ups. Among sexually active women at the 3-month follow-up, HLW participants were more likely than comparison participants to report having used condoms during vaginal sex with any male partner or with a primary male partner, and to have used condoms at last vaginal, anal or oral sex with any male partner. At the 6-month follow-up, HLW participants were more likely to report condom use at last vaginal, anal or oral sex with any male partner, and having an HIV test and receiving their test results. The study findings suggest that a single-session intervention delivered to pre-existing groups of black women is an efficacious approach to HIV prevention. This study also demonstrates that a CBO can develop and deliver a culturally appropriate, effective HIV prevention intervention for the population it serves and, with adequate resources and technical assistance, rigorously evaluate its intervention.


World Development | 1998

New Land is not enough: Agricultural performance of New Lands settlement in West Africa

Della E. McMillan; John H. Sanders; Dolores Koenig; Kofi Akwabi-Ameyaw; Thomas M. Painter

Abstract For centuries onchocerciasis, or river blindness, has contributed to the underpopulation of fertile river basins in much of the West African savanna. For this reason, an 11 -country program initiated in 1974 to control river blindness disease was expected to increase total crop production and improve living standards. Farm management data from 15 sites show that despite the control programs success in opening up new land, the farmers moving back into these areas were successful in increasing and stabilizing their incomes at only five of the 15 sites. Two of the major factors that explained these low success rates were the highly negative policy environment and lack of appropriate technology and supports for intensive cereal production in the drier semi-arid basins.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2012

Operational research to improve HIV prevention in the United States.

Jeffrey H. Herbst; Marlene Glassman; James W. Carey; Thomas M. Painter; Deborah J. Gelaude; Amy M. Fasula; Jerris L. Raiford; Arin Freeman; Camilla Harshbarger; Abigail H. Viall; David W. Purcell

AbstractThe HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States continues despite several recent noteworthy advances in HIV prevention. Contemporary approaches to HIV prevention involve implementing combinations of biomedical, behavioral, and structural interventions in novel ways to achieve high levels of impact on the epidemic. Methods are needed to develop optimal combinations of approaches for improving efficiency, effectiveness, and scalability. This article argues that operational research offers promise as a valuable tool for addressing these issues. We define operational research relative to domestic HIV prevention, identify and illustrate how operational research can improve HIV prevention, and pose a series of questions to guide future operational research. Operational research can help achieve national HIV prevention goals of reducing new infections, improving access to care and optimization of health outcomes of people living with HIV, and reducing HIV-related health disparities.


Aids Education and Prevention | 2010

Preventing AIDS through live movement and sound: efficacy of a theater-based HIV prevention intervention delivered to high-risk male adolescents in juvenile justice settings.

Jennifer Lauby; Archana Bodas LaPollo; Jeffrey H. Herbst; Thomas M. Painter; Heather Batson; Akil Pierre; Mary Milnamow

Male adolescents who cycle through the juvenile justice system are at high risk for HIV infection, yet there are few HIV prevention interventions for this high-risk population. This study evaluates the efficacy of Preventing AIDS through Live Movement and Sound (PALMS), an innovative, theory-based HIV risk reduction intervention that uses theatrical performances and role-play. The study used a nonrandomized concurrent comparison group design. A total of 289 predominantly African American males aged 12-18 from two juvenile justice facilities in Philadelphia, PA were enrolled. At 6-month follow-up, PALMS participants demonstrated greater increases in HIV and condom use knowledge and improved attitudes toward HIV testing and toward persons living with HIV/AIDS than did those in the comparison condition. PALMS participants were also significantly more likely to use a condom during their last sexual contact with a non-main female partner than comparison participants. This theater-based HIV prevention intervention is a potential resource for changing knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors of adolescents in juvenile justice settings.


Aids Education and Prevention | 2010

Strategies used by community-based organizations to evaluate their locally developed HIV prevention interventions: lessons learned from the CDC's innovative interventions project.

Thomas M. Painter; Paulyne M. Ngalame; Basil Lucas; Jennifer Lauby; Jeffrey H. Herbst

Community-based organizations (CBOs) play an important role in health promotion efforts and the delivery of HIV prevention interventions for at-risk minority populations. CBOs may also develop their own interventions but often lack the capacity or funds to rigorously evaluate them. The Innovative Interventions project of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) funded three CBOs to rigorously evaluate the efficacy of interventions they had developed and were delivering to Black women, Black men who have sex with men (MSM), and adolescent males in juvenile justice settings, respectively. The evaluation results have been reported elsewhere. This article describes operational issues that the CBOs identified as being particularly salient to their evaluations and the strategies they developed to address the issues and successfully complete their evaluations. These issues included the development of organizational capacity to conduct a rigorous outcome evaluation, difficulties with recruitment and retention of evaluation participants, and the use of process monitoring data to improve intervention delivery. The strategies described in this article can be used by CBOs when evaluating their locally developed HIV prevention interventions and may be of interest to funding agencies and researchers that collaborate with CBOs to evaluate their interventions.


Aids Education and Prevention | 2015

Enhancement of a Locally Developed HIV Prevention Intervention for Hispanic/Latino MSM: A Partnership of Community-Based Organizations, a University, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Scott D. Rhodes; Jorge Alonzo; Lilli Mann; Arin Freeman; Christina J. Sun; Manuel Garcia; Thomas M. Painter

Hispanic/Latino men who have sex with men (MSM) in the United States are disproportionately affected by HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs); however, no efficacious behavioral HIV/STD prevention interventions are currently available for use with this vulnerable population. We describe the enhancement of HOLA en Grupos, a community-based behavioral HIV/STD prevention intervention for Spanish-speaking Hispanic/Latino MSM that is currently being implemented and evaluated in North Carolina with support from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Our intervention enhancement process included incorporating local data on risks and context; identifying community needs and priorities; defining intervention core elements and key characteristics; developing a logic model; developing an intervention logo; enhancing intervention activities and materials; scripting intervention delivery; expanding the comparison intervention; and establishing a materials review committee. If the CDC-sponsored evaluation determines that HOLA en Grupos is efficacious, it will be the first such behavioral HIV/STD prevention intervention to be identified for potential use with Hispanic/Latino MSM, thereby contributing to the body of evidence-based resources that may be used for preventing HIV/STD infection among these MSM and their sex partners.


American Journal of Public Health | 2017

Small-group randomized controlled trial to increase condom use and HIV testing among hispanic/latino gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men

Scott D. Rhodes; Jorge Alonzo; Lilli Mann; Eun-Young Song; Amanda E. Tanner; Jorge Elias Arellano; Rodrigo Rodriguez-Celedon; Manuel Garcia; Arin Freeman; Beth A. Reboussin; Thomas M. Painter

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the HOLA en Grupos intervention, a Spanish-language small-group behavioral HIV prevention intervention designed to increase condom use and HIV testing among Hispanic/Latino gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men. METHODS In 2012 to 2015, we recruited and randomized 304 Hispanic/Latino men who have sex with men, aged 18 to 55 years in North Carolina, to the 4-session HOLA en Grupos intervention or an attention-equivalent general health education comparison intervention. Participants completed structured assessments at baseline and 6-month follow-up. Follow-up retention was 100%. RESULTS At follow-up, relative to comparison participants, HOLA en Grupos participants reported increased consistent condom use during the past 3 months (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 4.1; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.2, 7.9; P < .001) and HIV testing during the past 6 months (AOR = 13.8; 95% CI = 7.6, 25.3; P < .001). HOLA en Grupos participants also reported increased knowledge of HIV (P < .001) and sexually transmitted infections (P < .001); condom use skills (P < .001), self-efficacy (P < .001), expectancies (P < .001), and intentions (P < .001); sexual communication skills (P < .01); and decreased fatalism (P < .001). CONCLUSIONS The HOLA en Grupos intervention is efficacious for reducing HIV risk behaviors among Hispanic/Latino men who have sex with men.


International Journal of Std & Aids | 2016

Sexually transmitted infection diagnoses among Hispanic immigrant and migrant men who have sex with men in the United States.

Eduardo E. Valverde; Elizabeth DiNenno; Jeffrey D. Schulden; Alexandra M. Oster; Thomas M. Painter

Hispanic immigrant/migrant men who have sex with men (MSM) should be at higher risk for sexually transmitted infections/human immunodeficiency virus (STIs/HIV) given individual-level factors associated with the migration process that have been theorised to increase susceptibility to STIs/HIV among migrant populations. However, relatively little is known if these individual level factors are actually associated with the STI prevalence among this population. During 2005–2007, 2576 men and women foreign-born Hispanics were surveyed at three community-based organisations offering services to immigrant/migrant communities in the US. We analysed demographic characteristics, sexual risk behaviours, migration patterns, and factors associated with STI diagnoses (syphilis, chlamydia, and gonorrhoea) in the past 12 months among Hispanic immigrant/migrant MSM. Of 1482 Hispanic immigrant/migrant men surveyed who reported having sex in the past 12 months, 353 (24%) reported sex with a man, and of these, 302 answered questions regarding whether or not they had been diagnosed with a bacterial STI in the past year. Of these 302 men, 25% reported being married; 42% self-identified as being heterosexual and 20% as bisexual. Twenty-nine (9.6%) men reported that they had received an STI diagnosis in the past year. In the multivariate logistic regression model, men who reported receiving money or goods for sex had increased odds of a self-reported STI diagnosis. The prevalence of bacterial STIs among Hispanic immigrant/migrant MSM is lower than the prevalence of bacterial STIs among other MSM in the United States. Nevertheless, receiving money or goods for sex was significantly associated with a self-reported STI diagnosis among Hispanic immigrant/migrant MSM. It is important to understand factors contributing to participation in exchange sex among this population. HIV/STI prevention interventions tailored to non-gay identifying MSM are important for Hispanic immigrant/migrant MSM.


American Journal of Public Health | 2010

HIV PREVENTION INTERVENTIONS FOR BLACK MSM

Patricia Coury-Doniger; Leo Wilton; Jeffrey H. Herbst; Thomas M. Painter

We read with interest the recent Commentary by Peterson and Jones on HIV prevention for Black men who have sex with men (MSM) in the United States.1 The authors state that, “According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) criteria, no interventions exist or have been identified with proven effectiveness for Black MSM.”1 We wish to call the attention of the Journals readership to a study published in June 2009 demonstrating the efficacy of an intervention developed to prevent HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among Black MSM.2 In so doing, we wish to provide a needed update to the aforementioned Commentary. The group-level intervention, Many Men, Many Voices (3MV), was developed by community-based organizations and a university-based STI/HIV prevention training center with strong involvement of the Black MSM community. 3MV focuses on the effects of racism and homophobia on the sexual, substance use, and health promotion behaviors of Black MSM, and participants select from a menu of options to reduce HIV/STI transmission based on known factors of HIV infectivity. The efficacy study included 338 Black MSM of HIV-negative or unknown serostatus in New York City.2 Relative to comparison participants, 3MV participants reported a 25% greater reduction in the number of male sexual partners, a 66% greater reduction in any unprotected anal intercourse with casual male partners, a 51% greater reduction in any insertive unprotected anal intercourse, and a 33% greater likelihood of testing for HIV. A trend for more consistent condom use during receptive anal intercourse with casual male partners was also noted. This is the first randomized trial to demonstrate the efficacy of an HIV/STI prevention intervention designed by and for Black MSM. Based on the results of the efficacy study, 3MV has been included in the CDCs “Updated Compendium of Evidence-based HIV Prevention Interventions.”3 We concur with Peterson and Jones that there is an urgent need to increase the number of efficacious interventions for Black MSM, and support the authors’ suggestion that future interventions incorporate innovative strategies that can contribute to a reduction in existing HIV-related health disparities between Black and White MSM.4 Furthermore, interventions for Black MSM need to address sociocultural factors, including racism and homophobia, that contribute to increased risk among Black MSM.5 Finally, future research must address the pervasive role of STIs in acquiring and transmitting HIV among Black MSM, and identifying and assessing innovative strategies to increase STI testing and treatment among Black MSM.6

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Jeffrey H. Herbst

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Arin Freeman

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Ehounou R. Ekpini

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Lillian S. Lin

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Stefan Z. Wiktor

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Thierry H. Roels

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Toussaint S. Sibailly

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Danielle M Matia

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Eduardo E. Valverde

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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