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Social Networks, Drug Abuse, and HIV Transmission |
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NIDA Research Monograph, Number 151 [Printed in 1995]If you have the Acrobat reader plug-in for Netscape or Internet Explorer click on the document link and you will be able to view and/or print out the pages. If you have trouble viewing the document in your browser window, download the document (Windows users - right click on the link and Save as...) to your computer and get Adobe Acrobat Reader (free) in order to view it. This monograph is not available by chapter. The Table of Contents (below) is shown to assist in locating information prior to downloading the monograph. Table of Contents Introduction: The Social Network Research Paradigm-----1 Social Networks in Disease Transmission: The Colorado Springs Study-----3 Using Dyadic Data for a Network Analysis of HIV Infection and Risk Behaviors Among Injecting Drug Users-----20 Injecting Drug Use, Characteristics of Significant Others, and HIV Risk Behaviors-----38 Sibling Homophily in HIV Infection: Biopsychosocial Linkages in an Urban African-American Sample-----60 Focal Networks and HIV Risk Among African-American Male Intravenous Drug Users-----89 A Comparison of Drug Use Networks Across Three Cities-----109 Ethical and Legal Issues in Social Network Research: The Real and the Ideal-----131 Network Models for HIV Outreach and Prevention Programs for Drug Users-----144 A Personal Network Approach to AIDS Prevention: An Experimental Peer Group Intervention for Street-Injecting Drug Users: The SAFE Study-----181 Promising Social Network Research Results and Suggestions for a Research Agenda-----196 |
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