Hermanos de Luna y Sol - United States
- enhancing social support, social belonging, and enhanced self-esteem in the context of a Latino gay identity and community
- promoting critical awareness of social and cultural forces that impact and shape participants' social and sexual lives
- increasing participants' sexual self-knowledge, with particular emphasis on sexual contexts and situations of personal vulnerability that limit ability to practice safer sex, and
- facilitating community involvement and activism to support a sense of increased personal agency and self-efficacy (instead of fatalism and victimisation) in response to oppressive social forces in participants' lives.
HLS consists of 3 types of interrelated interventions:
- Outreach and recruitment activities with Latino gay/bisexual men at Latino-identified gay bars in the Mission district and surrounding areas in San Francisco and the Bay Area at large - the aim is to create opportunities for communication and reflection about the impact of HIV and safe sex pratices, to advertise the project, and to encourage participation in group meetings.
- 6-week initial discussion workshops for 8-10 Latino gay/bisexual men each - these 2-hour-long structured sessions are designed to promote self-esteem, social support, and sexual self-regulation. Some of the topics addressed in the face-to-face meetings include relations with family; communication issues that participants have faced in their sexual experiences; sociocultural factors; and the impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in participants' lives. The groups are facilitated by gay, Latino men who are trained health educators; they do not "transmit" information or resources (unless specifically requested by the participants) but, rather, engage participants in reflective dialogue and experiential exercises that promote critical thinking and self-observation.
- A set of follow-up resources and activiites designed to help participants maintain safer sex practices over time, including participation in ongoing peer support groups, specialised workshops and retreats, a programme newsletter, and access to individual risk reduction counseling services. A "graduates" group, which meets weekly, is meant to provide continuous and stable support for the exchange of experiences and dialogue among participants.
Incentives are built in to this programme. Participants receive a US$10 food voucher at the end of each of the initial sessions, as well as a tee-shirt at the end of a 6-week cycle.
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