7.5. Creating A Profession: Training Outreach Workers for AIDS Intervention Among Drug Users |
![]() |
Grey Literature - DPF: The Great Issues of Drug Policy 1990 |
Written by Michael Aldrich |
Youth Environment Study (YES), in collaboration with other local agencies, has fielded more than 40 Community Health Outreach Workers (CHOWs) in San Francisco since June 1986, funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. This program, which invented the bleach-and-teach outreach method for AIDS prevention among drug injectors, has been described previously (Feldman et al. 1985; Feldman 1987; Feldman and Biernacki 1988; Newmeyer et al. 1989; Aldrich et al. 1990), and is the model for similar programs in many cities. Today I am going to outline the 10-day training program we require all CHOWs to take before they hit the streets. We regard this training as essential to their success in preventing the spread of AIDS, and critical to their safety as well. The curriculum was developed primarily by Pat Norman, Director of the YES Training Center, with a lot of input from the founders of YES, Harvey Feldman and Pat Biernacki. We have trained more than 200 CHOWs from California, Hawaii, and other states and nations in these techniques, with funding from the California Office of AIDS. To be certified by YES and the State of California as a CHOW, each trainee must attend all classes, do all the assignments including a big three-ring binder of readings, and pass a pre/post test, an AIDS test, and a legal issues test with 70 percent or better. Trainees are also evaluated by CHOWs who take them out on the streets. Day 1. Overview: The YES Outreach Model Orientation: Pre-Test; YES Outreach Model: Ethnography of Drug Users: Drug Use Patterns Key to YES's intervention strategy is the development of a meaningful role for CHOWs as caring, non-judgmental providers of health information within the networks of drug injectors they serve (Norman et al. 1989). After an orientation in which trainees describe their local scenes to us, Dr. Feldman begins an overview of the development of our outreach model by saying, "The aim of our program is to stop the spread of a virus that causes deadly, incurable diseases. Given the consequences of failure at this task, all other considerations are secondary." The YES model is based on ethnography, understanding a social group from the perspective of its members, rather than on the stereotypes of drug users propounded by the media. During the afternoon, I discuss the science of ethnography as it applies to streetwork, and describe the current patterns of drug use in California. Day 2: The Clients in their Neighborhoods Drug Policy History: Drug Paraphernalia: Takin' It To The Streets (Supervisors) A slide talk on the history of U.S. drug policy leads to show-and-tell of the various types of drug paraphernalia CHOWs are likely to encounter when working with clients. CHOW Supervisors relate their observations of clients in their neighborhoods, with emphasis on applied ethnography, which we call "Takin' It To the Streets." We often take them on bus trips to begin observing street scenes. Day 3: HIV, ARC and AIDS HIV Testing: AIDS Diagnoses: Psychosocial Issues Day 4: Women and AIDS Pediatric: Women & AIDS: Safe Sex: SPIRITs Day 5: Youth, Prostitution and Sexuality AIDS Test: Youth: Runaways, Prostitution: Racism and Homophobia: Gay/Bisexual Issues Day 6: Cultural Sensitivity Sweet Grass Ritual: Panels on Native American, African American, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Latino Issues: Common Elements of Oppression. Day 7: Role of the CHOW: Do's and Don't's of Streetwork A very detailed examination of the role of the CHOW within networks of drug users is led by Dr. Feldman and our most experienced outreach supervisors. This includes gender issues, techniques for gaining entrance to networks, establishing credibility, responding to crises and dangerous situations, phases of outreach strategy, and the do's and don't's of effective streetwork. Trainees then spend several hours on the streets working with our CHOW teams. Day 8: Legal and Confidentiality Issues Street Experiences: Homeless and AIDS: Criminal Justice System: Legal Issues: Confidentiality and Privacy Issues. Day 9: Home Care, Volunteers and Field Notes Legal Test: Home Care for HIV Clients: Volunteers, Resources and Referrals; Writing Field Notes: Documenting Work. Day 10: Taking Care of Yourself: Certification Field Notes Review: Taking Care of Yourself; Post-Test; Final Evaluation; Certification. We have found that this training, which is constantly reexamined and modified to suit the needs of trainees from different areas, is quite successful in building teams of effective outreach workers. We keep in touch with our trainees and invite them back every three months for CHOW Reunions, which are 1-day inservice trainings on special topics suggested by the CHOWs themselves. We are creating a new profession, of highly skilled, streetwise health educators who serve clients in their own neighbor-hoods, rather than demanding that they come into offices or agencies. We think that this is the wave of the future. Michael Aldrich, Ph.D., is Training Program Coordinator for the Youth Environment Study I AIDS intervention Training Center, 507-B Divisadero St., San Francisco, Calif 94117. (415) 922-6135. References Aldrich, M.R.; Payne, S.F.; Little, S.M.; Mandel, J.; and Feldman, H.W., "Classic Epidemiological Mapping of AIDS Among San Francisco Drug Injectors, 1987-1989," Poster presentation Th.C.705 at the VI International Conference on AIDS, San Francisco, June 21, 1990. Feldman, H.W.; Mandel, J.; Fields, A., "In the Neighbor-hood: A Strategy for Delivering Early Intervention Ser-vices to Young Drug Users in Their Natural Environments," in A.S. Friedman and G.W. Beschner (eds.), Treatment Services for Adolescent Substance Abusers, Washington, D.C.: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1985, 112-128. Feldman, H.W., "Outreach Education to Intravenous Drug Users," Presentation to the Presidential Commission on the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Epidemic, Dec. 18, 1987. Feldman, H.W. and Biernacki, P., "The Ethnography of Needle Sharing Among Intravenous Drug Users and Implications for Public Policies and Intervention Strate-gies," in R.J. Battjes and R.W. Pickens (eds.), Needle Sharing Among Intravenous Drug Abusers: National and International Perspectives, NIDA Research Monograph 80, Washington, D.C.: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1988, 28-38. Newmeyer, J.A.; Feldman, H.W.; Biernacki, P.; and Watters, J.K., "Preventing AIDS Contagion Among Intra-venous Drug Users," Medical Anthropology, v.10, 1989, 167-175. Norman, P.; Aldrich, M.; Anacabe, C.; Ozawa, D.; and Karp, R., Outreach to Intravenous Drug Users: A Training Manual for Community Health Outreach Workers and Supervisors, San Francisco: Youth Environment Study |