The Need for Basic and Strategic Socio-Behavioral Sciences and Partner Protections to Promote Global Ethical Research with Karine Dube, DrPH, MPhil (Oxon) Associate Professor of Medicine, University of California, San Diego.
This presentation will discuss recent developments in the socio-behavioral sciences of HIV cure-related research involving analytical treatment interruptions (ATIs). We will review and discuss a theoretical framework for partner protections to promote global ethical research and recent empirical findings to increase diversity in HIV cure-related research in the United States and sub-Saharan Africa.
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Dr. Karine Dubé is a senior socio-behavioral scientist and experienced research program manager who integrates biomedical, social sciences, ethics, and patient engagement around HIV-related research in the United States and South Africa. She has nearly 20 years of experience in infectious disease-related work, including the socio-behavioral sciences and ethics of HIV cure-related research, HIV prevention, HIV treatment, Ebola, malaria, and HSV-2. She is the Multi-Principal Investigator of a National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) R01 grant investigating psychosocial experiences of people with HIV who interrupt treatment during cure research as part of the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) and at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) (with Dr. John Sauceda, UCSF).
CAPS/DPS/PRC Town Hall. The CAPS Developmental Core hosts this presentation. Town Hall Chairs: Parya Saberi, PharmD, and John Sauceda, Ph.D., MS
Recorded: Tuesday, August. 15th, 2023
13 июн 2024