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Rogério M. Pinto
Researcher at University of Michigan
Publications - 81
Citations - 1885
Rogério M. Pinto is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Public health. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 79 publications receiving 1501 citations. Previous affiliations of Rogério M. Pinto include Columbia University.
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'It's really a hard life': love, gender and HIV risk among male-to-female transgender persons.
TL;DR: Data reveal that stigma and discrimination create a heightened need for MTFs to feel safe and loved by a male companion and that in turn places them at a higher risk for acquiring HIV.
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Improving PrEP Implementation Through Multilevel Interventions: A Synthesis of the Literature
TL;DR: This review of PrEP implementation identified barriers to PrEP and interventions to match those barriers and recommended multilevel interventions targeting barriers at multiple socioecological domains.
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Male-to-Female Transgender Individuals Building Social Support and Capital From Within a Gender-Focused Network.
TL;DR: This article explores how minority MTFs, specifically in an urban environment, develop supportive social networks defined by their gender and sexual identities and uses principles of community-based participatory research (CBPR) to do this.
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Keeping the spirit of community partnerships alive in the scale up of HIV/AIDS prevention: critical reflections on the roll out of DEBI (Diffusion of Effective Behavioral Interventions).
TL;DR: This work reviews the available evidence on how the dissemination of packaged interventions is necessary but not sufficient for ensuring the success of technology transfer and considers additional principles that are vital for successful technology transfer.
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Depressive Symptomatology among HIV-Positive Women in the Era of HAART: A Stress and Coping Model
Robert H. Remien,Theresa M. Exner,Robert M. Kertzner,Anke A. Ehrhardt,Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus,Mallory O. Johnson,Lance S. Weinhardt,Lauren Kittel,Risë B. Goldstein,Rogério M. Pinto,Stephen F. Morin,Margaret A. Chesney,Marguerita Lightfoot,Cheryl Gore-Felton,Brian Dodge,Jeffrey A. Kelly +15 more
TL;DR: Interventions focused on improving coping self-efficacy, bolstering social supports, and decreasing stress in the lives of HIV-positive women may help to reduce the negative effects of HIV disease on mood.