Technology Transfer Team (3T)
| Click on one of the links below to access programs |
Description of program |
Capacity Building Assistance Center (CBAC)
|
CBAC’s goal is to improve the performance of the HIV prevention workforce by delivering scientifically sound and culturally proficient assistance through information sharing, training and the provision of technical assistance. We provide assistance to agencies working with interventions targeting individuals who are HIV positive, promoting a continuum of service from training to technical assistance. We can assist CBOs and state and local health departments with four interventions: Healthy Relationships, Comprehensive Risk Counseling and Services, Partnership for Health, and Choosing Life: Empowerment! Action! Results!.
|
Behavioral Intervention Training Center (Dallas PTC)
|
The Dallas PTC designs and provides STD/HIV behavioral and social intervention training, in English and Spanish, for a diverse audience of health professionals in the Southern Quadrant of the United States. The Dallas PTC is responsible for training on selected DEBIs (Diffusion of Evidence Based Interventions) and HIV prevention strategies that include: Community PROMISE; Healthy Relationships; Choosing Life: Empowerment! Action! Results!; Many Men, Many Voices; Project RESPECT; and Comprehensive Risk Counseling and Services.
|
Replicating Effective Programs Project (REP)
|
The goal of the REP Project is to convert effective, research-based, behavioral interventions into packages for use by local HIV prevention agencies. With these “how to” materials, training, and technical assistance, prevention providers can implement these interventions with fidelity to the original research, while adapting them to succeed in their communities. UT Southwestern’s REP Project created the Healthy Relationships package and is currently working on Nia, a small group-level intervention for African-American men.
|
Disclaimer
The materials on this site are designed for HIV/AIDS prevention with persons at risk for acquiring or transmitting HIV. They are meant to be resources used by HIV prevention providers such as health departments and community-based organizations so as to provide the best evidence-based HIV prevention services.
These materials are not meant for the general public. They are not meant for children. They are not school-based HIV prevention strategies. They are designed to help change the behaviors of persons whose behaviors place them at risk for HIV infection.