The papers located during CATIE's 2009 HIV prevention literature survey are:
Bucharski, D., Reutter, L. I., Ogilvie, L. D. (2006). âYou need to know where weâre coming fromâ: Canadian Aboriginal womenâs perspectives on culturally appropriate HIV counseling and testing. Health Care for Women International 27(8), 723-747.
Larkin, J., Flicker, S., Koleszar-Green, R., Mintz, S., Dagnino, M., Mitchell, C. (2007). HIV risk, systemic inequities, and Aboriginal youth: Widening the circle for HIV prevention programming. Canadian Journal of Public Health 98(3), 179-82.
Mujamdar, B. B., Chambers, T. L., Roberts, J. (2004). Community-based, culturally sensitive HIV/AIDS education for Aboriginal adolescents: Implication for Nursing Practice. Journal of Transcultural Nursing 15(1), 69-73.
Shercliffe, R. J., Hampton, M., McKay-McNabb, K., Jeffery, B., Beattie, P., & McWatters, B. (2007). Cognitive and Demographic Factors that Predict Self-Efficacy to Use Condoms in Vulnerable and Marginalized Aboriginal Youth. Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality 16(1/2), 45-56.Wu, H., Wu, J., Wong, T., Anonov, A., Li, Q., Dinner, K., Donaldson, T., Paton, S. & Enhanced Hepatitis Strain Surveillance System (2006). Incidence and risk factors for newly acquired hepatitis C virus infection among Aboriginal versus non-Aboriginal Canadians in six regions, 1999-2004. European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases, 26(3), 167-174.