Journal article
AIDS Education and Prevention, 2025
APA
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Shrader, C.-H., Robinson, C. L., Hassan, M., Brown, B., Lee, J.-Y., Smith, M. D. R., … Duncan, D. T. (2025). "It's Whack, It's Not Gonna Work": Feasibility of Sociocentric Network Recruitment for Interventions Among Black, Latine, and Caribbean Priority Populations in New York City. AIDS Education and Prevention.
Chicago/Turabian
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Shrader, Cho-Hee, Courtney L. Robinson, M. Hassan, Brandon Brown, Ji-Young Lee, Martez D R Smith, Carl A. Latkin, John A. Schneider, Danielle C Ompad, and Dustin T. Duncan. “&Quot;It's Whack, It's Not Gonna Work&Quot;: Feasibility of Sociocentric Network Recruitment for Interventions Among Black, Latine, and Caribbean Priority Populations in New York City.” AIDS Education and Prevention (2025).
MLA
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Shrader, Cho-Hee, et al. “&Quot;It's Whack, It's Not Gonna Work&Quot;: Feasibility of Sociocentric Network Recruitment for Interventions Among Black, Latine, and Caribbean Priority Populations in New York City.” AIDS Education and Prevention, 2025.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{cho-hee2025a,
title = {"It's Whack, It's Not Gonna Work": Feasibility of Sociocentric Network Recruitment for Interventions Among Black, Latine, and Caribbean Priority Populations in New York City.},
year = {2025},
journal = {AIDS Education and Prevention},
author = {Shrader, Cho-Hee and Robinson, Courtney L. and Hassan, M. and Brown, Brandon and Lee, Ji-Young and Smith, Martez D R and Latkin, Carl A. and Schneider, John A. and Ompad, Danielle C and Duncan, Dustin T.}
}
INTRODUCTION Black, Latine, and Caribbean (BLC) sexual and gender minorities (SGM) face structural HIV inequities. Sociocentric interventions may address these barriers, but it is unclear if respondent-driven sampling (RDS) can recruit existing BLC SGM friendship groups or if sociocentric HIV prevention interventions are feasible.
METHODS Using an exploratory mixed-methods design (August/2022-January/2024, New York, NY), we recruited participants into a sociocentric RDS group (sRDS) or an individual-level peer referral (PR) group, with qualitative interviews drawn from quantitative participants.
RESULTS We enrolled 29 participants in sRDS (seeds = 6) and 30 in PR; 18 completed qualitative interviews. Most were Black or Caribbean; half were US-born; over half were living with HIV. PR was viewed as feasible, while sRDS and sociocentric interventions were seen as inappropriate. Participants suggested social media and influencers for recruitment.
DISCUSSION Sociocentric approaches may be less acceptable to BLC SGM; recruitment should account for intersectional identities and offer fair compensation.