Our research team has authored articles in both distinguished medical journals and international media that showcases their passion in developing culturally and socially appropriate interventions that will decrease the incidence of HIV among African American males as well as increase knowledge, awareness, and utility of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for Black women.
Visit the article titles below to learn more about the team's research.
The Talk Program & Research Study
- Barber-led sexual health education intervention for Black male adolescents and their fathers
- Black Fathers' Preferences for Sexual Health Interventions with their Adolescent Sons
- Keeping Kids Curious About Their Bodies Without Shame
- African-American Fathers' Perspectives on Facilitators and Barriers to Father-Son Sexual Health Communication
- Understanding Key Barriers to Fathers' Involvement in Their Children's Lives
- Parent-youth communication to reduce at-risk sexual behavior: A systematic literature review
- Values that Fathers Communicate to Sons about Sex, Sexuality, Relationships, and Marriage
Black Women and HIV Research Study
- How Perceived Structural Racism and Discrimination and Medical Mistrust in the Health System Influences Participation in HIV Health Services for Black Women Living int he United States South: A Qualitative, Descriptive Study
- Leveraging social networks of Black women in beauty salons to improve uptake of pre-exposure prophylaxis
- Using the Social-Ecological Model of HIV Prevention to Explore HIV Testing Behaviors of Young Black College Women
- Duke University School of Nursing Investigators Embark on Innovative Community Study to Reduce Growing HIV Rates Among Black Women in the South
- We Need to Talk About Racism as a Barrier to HIV Prevention and Care for Black Women
- Medical mistrust grounded in structural and systemic racism affects HIV care for Black women in the US South
- Structural and systemic racism in health care system affects HIV care for black women