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Vol. 21, Iss. 4

Keep It Up: Development of a Community-Based Health Screening and HIV Prevention Strategy for Reaching Young African American Men

Lydia O'Donnell1, Beverly Bonaparte2, Heather Joseph3, Gail Agronick1, Deborah McLean Leow1, Athi Myint-U1, Ann Stueve1

1 Health and Human Development Programs, Education Development Center, Inc., Newton, MA.

2 Medgar Evers College, City University of New York, New York.

3 National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.

This research was supported by Cooperative Agreement 5UR6PS000399 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The authors thank Sarah Hayes, Michael Maffie, and Kit Irwin at Education Development Center, Inc., for their contributions to intervention development, as well as graphic artist Matt Robinson and Mile End Films.

At Medgar Evers College, the Male Development Empowerment Center supported men's participation and provided critical input and feedback on materials, and baccalaureate nursing students, under the guidance of coauthor Dr. Bonaparte, volunteered to conduct health screening during the initial pilot.

They thank Jayashree Ravishankar, MD, medical director, and the SUNY Down-state Medical Center STAR Program for their participation in planning and provision of HIV testing, counseling, and referral.

From the inception of the project through pilot testing, they appreciated the contributions of our expert panel, community advisory board and Andrew Margolis, Raekiela Taylor, and Leigh Willis at the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Address correspondence to Lydia O'Donnell, EdD, Education Development Center, Inc., 55 Chapel St., Newton, MA 02459; e-mail: .



This article addresses the challenge of developing HIV prevention interventions that not only prove to be efficacious but also are designed from the outset to overcome obstacles to reaching priority populations. We describe how community input has informed development of Keep It Up (KIU), a community health screening and behavioral prevention program for young Black men. KIU embeds HIV prevention in a broader health promotion campaign, with the goal of reducing stigma and reaching a population that bears a disproportionate burden of HIV/AIDS and other health problems—hypertension, high cholesterol, diabetes, asthma, and obesity. Information from community partners, expert advisers, and focus groups was collected at key junctures and incorporated into four core components: social marketing, a computerized behavioral learning module, biological testing for HIV and other conditions, and a personalized health profile and risk reduction plan. A pilot with 116 participants provided evidence that the KIU model of integrating HIV prevention with other health screening is acceptable and has the potential to reach Black men at risk for HIV as well as other chronic health conditions.

Cited by

, , , , , , , . (2011) “The Anticipation Alone could Kill You”: Past and Potential Clients' Perspectives on HIV Testing in Non-Health Care Settings. AIDS Education and Prevention 23:6, 577-594
Online publication date: 1-Dec-2011.
Abstract | PDF (141 KB) | PDF with links (142 KB)