Peer-to-Peer Outreach Model to Curb HIV-AIDS Transmission Among High-Risk Minority Youth and Adolescents
This funding opportunity seeks to improve the HIV-AIDS health outcomes of high-risk minority youth (13-19 years old) by supporting community-based efforts to increase HIV-AIDS prevention and education efforts, testing, counseling and referrals. The program will integrate HIV testing, peer educators and lay health workers, counseling and linkages, and social media and technology into a wide- ranging community model to reduce the risk of infection in high prevalence communities.
This project will also encourage partnerships among traditional service providers targeting high-risk adolescents, such as substance abuse prevention centers for youth; foster care agencies working with youth; youth-serving organizations; runaway youth shelters; and peer-to-peer education programs.
The project will have three major components:
- HIV testing, counseling, and linkages to services;
- peer-to-peer educators/lay health workers for HIV/AIDS education; and
- utilization of social media and technology.
To qualify for funding, an applicant must be a private nonprofit, community-based organization with at least five years of experience in providing services to targeted minority populations.