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Associate Professor of Social Work CarolAnn Daniel assisted Haitians in preventing HIV and other sexually transmitted infections.

By Bonnie Eissner

Even before the devastating 2010 earthquake, Haiti had the highest HIV infection ratein the West, outside of Africa, according to Adelphi Associate Professor of Social Work CarolAnn Daniel, Ph.D. The quake and its dire aftermath have only exacerbated thesituation. Dr. Daniel and a colleague, Carmen Logie, Ph.D., from the University ofCalgary, have spent the past year and a half working on two grant-funded programsintended to support the most vulnerable Haitians and assist them in preventing HIV andother sexually transmitted infections (STI).

This past May, Dr. Daniel and Logie completed a yearlong project to develop and test acommunity health worker-delivered HIV/STI prevention program for 200 women livingin internally displaced persons camps just outside of Port-au-Prince, in Léogane, Haiti.For the project, Dr. Daniel and her colleague developed a six-week psychoeducationaland sexual health program to encourage dialogue on such issues as STI and what putswomen at risk. They also created surveys to determine what the women knew aboutHIV and STI and the individual, social and environmental factors that contribute toinfection before and after the education program. Dr. Daniel explains that, “Capacitybuilding was another important goal of the project, so we hired and trained 10internally displaced women to run the groups and conduct the surveys.” The projectwas funded by $100,000 from Grand Challenges in Global Health and was the onlysocial research project—out of 20—to receive a Grand Challenges grant.

For their second project, which began this past summer, Drs. Daniel and Logie received$25,000 from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research to conduct a photo voiceproject to, in Dr. Daniel’s words, “understand HIV prevention priorities, barriers andfacilitators among young women and men 18–24 in Léogane.” The roughly 60 youngpeople who are participating in the project use instant cameras to document the people,places and situations that put them at risk for STI. They then select the pictures that aremost meaningful to them and explain them in written or oral narrative. Dr. Daniel saysthat the photo voice approach “puts people in charge of how they represent themselvesand their situation.” She continues: “It also allows the young people to becomecompetent participants in the research process—both of which are very important to us,given the negative folk narrative in the U.S. about people in Haiti.”

Ultimately, Dr. Daniel intends to “demystify the biosocial aspects of HIV.” Shesays, “Haitians are very clear that it’s their poverty and desolation that leads people todo things that put them at risk…Once you work there, it’s not difficult to see it, you justhave to know how to listen to really get it.”

HIV and STI documentation project

Young people in Léogane, Haiti, who worked with Adelphi Associate Professor of Social Work CarolAnn Daniel, Ph.D., on an HIV and STI documentation project

This piece appeared in the Fall 2012 edition.

For further information, please contact:

Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director
p – 516.237.8634
e – twilson@adelphi.edu

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