Additional Resources

Here you can download resource materials from our trainings and events to use at your agency.  Look at the menu bar on the left to find the specific topic area you are interested in learning more about.

Learn More

We have also provided some additional resources from our center and others that may be of interest to you.

Johns Hopkins PrEP Clinical Training Now Available

The Johns Hopkins REACH Initiative at the School of Nursing is now offering an online PrEP clinical training on the Coursera website. The course is a great offering for busy medical providers in Maryland and elsewhere who don’t have time to complete the training in-person. The training offers 9.1 contact hours for nurses via the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. Financial assistance for the course is available to Navigators and those who cannot afford the fee. The course can be found HERE!

Please PrEP Me and Project Inform, two organizers based in San Francisco, have just released a new manual, “Helping People Access PrEP,” for PrEP medical providers and navigators. The manual aims to increase PrEP knowledge for those at all levels of PrEP experience and skills.

Dissemination and Implementation Practices Articles
Gregory, H., Van Orden, O., Jordan, L., Portnoy, G., Welsh, E., Betkowski, J., . . . DiClemente, C. New Directions in Capacity Building: Incorporating Cultural Competence into the Interactive Systems Framework. American Journal of Community Psychology, Online FirstTM, 3 April 2012. doi: 10.1007/s10464-012-9508-8
HIV/AIDS Articles

Willenbring, M. (2005). Integrating care for patients with infectious, psychiatric, and substance use disorders: concepts and approaches. AIDS, 19(Suppl 3), S227-S237.

Saitz, R., Sullivan, L.M., & Samet, J.H. (2000). Training Community-Based Clinicians in Screening and Brief Intervention for Substance Abuse Problems: Translating Evidence into Practice. Substance Abuse, 21, 21-31.
Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change (Stages of Change) Resources & Articles
Overview and Stages of the model on the HABITS webpage
DiClemente, C.C., Schlundt, D., & Gemmell, L. (2004). Readiness and stages of change in addiction treatment. American Journal on Addictions, 13(2), 103-119.

DiClemente, C.C. (2003). Addiction and Change: How Addictions Develop and Addicted people Recover. New York: Guilford Press.

Velasquez, M.M., Maurer, G., Crouch, C., & DiClemente, C.C. (2001). Group Treatment for Substance Abuse: A Stages-of-Change Therapy Manual. New York, NY: Guildford Publications.

Prochaska, J.O., & DiClemente, C.C. (1992). Stages of change in the modification of problem behavior. Progress in Behavior Modification, 28. Hersen, M.: Eisler, R., and Miller, P.M., Eds. Sycamore, IL: Sycamore Publishing Company.

Prochaska, J.O., DiClemente, C.C., & Norcross, J.C. (1992). In Search of How People Change. Applications to Addictive Behaviors. American Psychologist, 47, 1102-1113.

Velicer, W.F., Rossi, J.S., Prochaska, J.O., Diclemente, C.C. (1996). A criterion measurement model for health behavior change. Addictive Behaviors, 21, 555-584.
Substance Abuse Prevention Articles

DiClemente, C.C., Nidecker, M., & Bellack, A.S. (2008). Motivation and the stages of change among individuals with severe mental illness and substance abuse disorders. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 34(1), 25-35.

Nidecker, M., DiClemente, C.C., Bennett, M.E., & Bellack, A.S. (2008). Application of the Transtheoretical Model of change: Psychometric properties of leading measures in patients with co-occuring drug abuse and severe mental illness. Addictive Behaviors, 33(8), 1021-1030.

Velasquez, M.M., Maurer, G., Crouch, C., & DiClemente, C.C. (2001). Group Treatment for Substance Abuse: A Stages-of-Change Therapy Manual. New York, NY: Guildford Publications.

Werch, C.E., & DiClemente, C.C. (1994). A multi-component stage model for matching drug prevention strategies and messages to youth stage of use. Health Education Research, 9, 37-46.
Presentations
April 29, 2008  — The Social Sciences Forum presents UMBC’s first Liptiz Lecture, Monday, April 28th, Carlo DiClemente, Lipitz professor of the arts, humanities and social sciences and professor of psychology, presents “Making a Difference? Evaluating the Complicated Process of Behavior Change.” Watch the presentation here.