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Showing papers by "South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control published in 1991"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that in a rural setting, partner notification of HIV exposure can accurately target education and testing and can produce positive behavior change.
Abstract: The authors conducted a confidential and voluntary partner notification program to identify and educate the sex and needle-sharing partners of individuals with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in a rural health district in South Carolina. During the first 30 months, of 485 named contacts, 290 (60%) were residents of the health district and were contacted and offered testing. Of the 290 contacted, 280 (97%)--53 women and 227 men; age range 14-74 years--accepted counseling and testing and 49 (18%) were HIV-antibody positive. Only 3 of the 49 (6%) had been previously tested. All HIV-infected individuals received appropriate physician, laboratory, and public health referrals. During the study, the mean number of sex partners per 6-month period decreased from 5.6 to 1.1 (80% reduction) for HIV-antibody positive persons and from 4.0 to 2.0 (50% reduction) for HIV-antibody negative persons. The authors conclude that in a rural setting, partner notification of HIV exposure can accurately target education and testing and can produce positive behavior change.

38 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that there is a relatively high rate of HIV infection in these rural South Carolina migrant workers, whose behavior puts them at risk for HIV infection and other sexually transmitted diseases.
Abstract: :After finding human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in a migrant worker named as a syphilis contact, the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control offered HIV counseling and testing and syphilis screening to migrant workers in the surrounding two-county area. In a

34 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: A large scale community health survey was conducted by the State and Federal agencies, which included telephone and in-home interviews as well as clinical assessments of participants, and produced baseline data for program planning and for measuring the success of ongoing intervention efforts.
Abstract: A community cardiovascular disease prevention program was undertaken as a cooperative effort of the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control and the Centers for Disease Control of the Public Health Service. As part of the evaluation of the project, a large scale community health survey was conducted by the State and Federal agencies. The successful design and implementation of the survey, which included telephone and in-home interviews as well as clinical assessments of participants, is described. Interview response rates were adequate, although physical assessments were completed on only 61 percent of those interviewed. Households without telephones were difficult and costly to identify, and young adults were difficult to locate for survey participation. The survey produced baseline data for program planning and for measuring the success of ongoing intervention efforts. Survey data also have been used to estimate the prevalence of selected cardiovascular disease risk factors.

27 citations