New treatment advances have radically altered the course of HIV illness and created new challenges for HIV-affected individuals, families, and communities. This article provides a conceptual framework for understanding HIV in the multiple contexts of the client's culture, strengths, life course, and biomedical progression. The article concludes with a discussion of HIV prevention and treatment adherence as key focal points for social workers and their clients.
Managed care continues to revolutionize the provision of mental health services in the United States. Long-term, open-ended therapies have been replaced by short-term, highly focused interventions. Increasingly, managed care organizations rely on standardized preferred practice guidelines to give direction and focus to social work and other therapeutic interventions. Critics argue that changes effected by managed care, particularly the use of treatment guidelines, depersonalize the client-worker relationship and significantly reduce the role of empathy in the therapeutic process. Moreover, these critics suggest that overall client satisfaction with mental health services has deteriorated. This article presents a study that examined clients' perceptions of empathy and overall satisfaction with managed behavioral health care when the clients were in unstructured individual therapy or in time-limited standardized group therapy. The results reveal no significant difference in the clients' perception of empathy or of their overall satisfaction regardless of the type of treatment they received. This article describes the rationale and design of the study, presents the results, and discusses the implications for social work practice.
A growing body of health determinants research recognizes that housing and health are intimately linked. This study explores the relationship between rent burden (the ratio of rent to income) and health risk behaviors among a sample of single room occupancy (SRO) building residents. Cross-sectional data were gathered from a sample of 162 residents living in privately owned, for-profit SROs in Chicago. Findings indicated that participants who had full rental subsidies and thus were designated in a no-rent-burden category were more likely to engage in risk behaviors including illicit drug use, having multiple sexual partners, and having sex without a condom, in comparison to participants with moderate or high-rent burdens. These findings suggest that interventions to increase housing stability and affordability and bolster reliable income sources (in addition to rental subsidies) may be key in reducing risk behaviors and improving health for vulnerably housed populations such as SRO residents.
Despite nearly 20 years of HIV prevention efforts, rates of new HIV infection persist at an alarming rate. As successful antiretroviral medications enable many HIV infected persons to live longer, healthier lives, interventions are necessary to support ongoing prevention and reduced risk behaviors. This article describes a survey that was used to assess the opportunities and challenges related to the integration of prevention screening into the work of HIV/AIDS case managers. The article describes the survey, reports the findings (N = 101), and concludes with a discussion of issues that must be addressed prior to incorporating prevention screening into HIV/AIDS case management.
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