This essay focuses on HIV prevention education.10 pages task and 10 slides presentation (ppt) 10 pages task and 10 slides presentation (ppt) “Use of streaming devices for providing HIV prevention education”
The use of streaming devices for providing HIV prevention
Description
10 pages task and 10 slides presentation (ppt)
10 pages task and 10 slides presentation (ppt)
“Use of streaming devices for providing HIV prevention education”
Firstly, THAT’S THE TOPIC / HAS TO BE APA 7th ed
We need a comprehensive literature review (of 30 articles) done on the above topic mentioned.
And a power point of the paper. 10-15 slides
Secondly, not including the title or reference slides.
The references have to be 5 years or less and from CINAL, PUBMED or NURSING JOURNAL.
Below are the instructions that we are to follow.
The final product will be a formal paper including title page, abstract and references.
You will at a minimum include the following subtitles into the paper:
Introduction/or Background, Search Strategy, Findings, Synthesis of Evidence, and Conclusion/Implications for Nursing Practice.
The Findings section of the literature review is best presented in a way that categorizes the literature into subsections.
You should have at least three subsections of literature.
Look forward to hearing back.
the paper has to focus on theorotical/ conceptual framework, research hypothesis/ questions/ , methodology, analysis and results, conclusion, and implications for future research and nursing practice.
Although the proportion of new HIV infections in the United States among women has decrease over the last few years, still, approximately 20% of new infections occur annually among adolescent and adult women.
The development of effective evidence-based prevention interventions remains an important approach to further decreasing these numbers.
Technology-delivered prevention interventions hold tremendous potential due, in part, to their ability to reach beyond the walls of brick-and-mortar intervention sites to engage individuals where they are.
While most technology-deliver interventions have focus on adolescents and men who have sex with men,
much fewer have specifically target adolescent or adult women despite evidence showing interventions tailored to specific target populations are most effective.
We summarize the recently published literature on technology-deliver HIV prevention interventions for U.S. adolescent and adult women and provide suggestions for next steps in this nascent but emergent area of prevention research.