Working toward efficacious preventive interventions for alcohol-related HIV/AIDS

NIH RePORTER · NIH · U13 · $58,472 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

 DESCRIPTION (provided by the applicant): The NIH has been a global leader in supporting research toward the improvement of both behavioral and biomedical, as well as combined, HIV prevention and treatment interventions. Although there have been significant advances in both general HIV basic and intervention trials research, and in research on the acute effects of alcohol on HIV-­related sexual risk, a gap remains on the intersection of these two bodies of knowledge. NIAAA has long supported basic behavioral and social research as a foundation for HIV prevention interventions as part of its HIV/AIDS research portfolio. Recent examples of NIAAA's support of such research include its subscription to NIH FOAs PA-­13-­121, "Research on alcohol and HIV/AIDS," and PA-­14-­061, "Substance use and abuse, risky decision-­making, and HIV-­AIDS." Of direct relevance to the proposed application, since 2005 NIAAA has sponsored three (2005, 2007, and 2014, respectively) workshops held in the Washington, DC area dedicated to bringing together invited basic and prevention science alcohol/HIV/AIDS researchers to discuss their research and to foster communication and collaborations between the basic research and prevention science communities. The main objective of this application is to use the foundation laid through NIAAA's prior efforts by convening alcohol/HIV researchers in order to discuss and disseminate recent research findings toward the explicit end of integrating that knowledge into models of HIV prevention and thereby HIV behavioral primary and secondary interventions ultimately to enhance their effectiveness. The proposed series of four conference meetings/workshops, given their timing and context, will allow presentation of information to a wide array of alcohol/HIV researchers in a focused, timely manner that will accelerate the advance of behavioral HIV prevention interventions in a way that is not feasible given current limitations in the resources available to NIAAA programs to sponsor conferences and workshops.

Key facts

NIH application ID
9929519
Project number
5U13AA024987-05
Recipient
SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
STEPHEN A MAISTO
Activity code
U13
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$58,472
Award type
5
Project period
2016-05-05 → 2022-04-30