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"Vernacular Lowdown on AIDS"

Insight (12/26/88-1/2/89) Vol. 4, No. 52, P. 26
Holzman, David


Abstract: BecAUse the inner city blacks and Hispanics who are now most at risk of HIV infection do not receive messages from the public health establishment, the federal government is beginning to support "indigenous outreach workers" to dispense AIDS education and prevention information. Hundreds of grass-roots organizations nationwide have sprung up or have adapted existing programs to take AIDS messages to the street. "It wasn't until 1985 that there was any printed information in Spanish," says Adolfo Mata of the Latino AIDS Project in San Francisco, who says it is better "to reach better by word of mouth." The Latino AIDS Project concentrates on men who have sex with men but do not consider themselves gay. Other groups try to reach black and Latino men in prison, runaway youth, and drug addicts. Some groups negotiate with police and drug dealers to reach addicts. BecAUse black men often resist using condoms, Dr. Tanis King Dasher of San Francisco's Bayview-Hunter's Point Foundation says one approach is "to try to empower the women" to negotiate safe sex. The government is putting about $80 million this fiscal year into grass roots efforts.
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