Abstract

The Community Readiness Model (CR) offers a solution to the development of prevention strategies at the community level that makes use of community collaborations and community capacity. CR was administered in the U.S. Virgin Islands on St. Thomas, St. Croix, and St. John. All three islands scored lowest on dimensions of community climate and highest on knowledge of efforts to fight HIV/AIDS. The findings suggest that initial intervention efforts should improve the community climate of HIV/AIDS denial and stigma prior to introducing interventions that address HIV/AIDS risk behaviors. Community collaborators identify the interplay of social, structural, and political-economic factors for effective prevention. *This Special Issue of SUM explores the nexus between “substance use” and STD/HIV/AIDS for necessary intervention planning, implementation and assessment. This article is included even though it does not include substance use as a primary focus. It offers a community intervention paradigm that has been field-tested many times, which readers should be aware of. It introduces community processes (community engagement and community alliances) that are akin to the necessary treatment processes of therapeutic engagement and therapeutic community alliances. Editor's Note.

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