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This document is being maintained for historical purposes, but is now out of date. To view current guidelines please visit:
- HIV/AIDS Guidelines and Recommendations at http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/guidelines/index.html
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Figure 1 Field Safety Protocol Field safety protocols are based on program activities and are intended to provide the staff and peer educators with guidance regarding their professional behavior. - Carry picture identification (I.D.) at all times that includes name of the organization, name of the project, your name, and the purpose for your presence. - Work in pairs and always know where your partner is. - Establish a mechanism to keep your supervisor aware of your location and activities (e.g., carry a beeper, call telephone mailbox at a specified time). - Establish contact with local police precincts in the area. Leave copy of I.D. with the commander. If appropriate for your program, maintain relations with the police; introduce the program and staff. - Have contingency plans for worst case scenarios and share them with your partner. - Make sure you have made contact with and have permission from a key person in the community before entering the setting in which you will conduct the intervention (e.g., shooting galleries, crack houses, or local high schools). - Leave the area if tension or violence is observed or perceived. - Avoid controversy and debate with clients and program participants. - When you start your job as a peer educator in the field, get a TB skin test; you should be re-tested periodically thereafter. - Be aware of weather conditions and be prepared for natural occurrences. - Design and adhere to a schedule for outreach or peer education. - Avoid drinking alcoholic beverages and buying, receiving, or sampling drugs while conducting outreach or peer education.
This page last reviewed: Monday, February 01, 2016
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