Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

in-biosketch:yes

person:freids01

Total Results:

800


Sociocultural interventions at the community level

Friedman, S R; O'Reilly, K
PMID: 9451986
ISSN: 0269-9370
CID: 4842232

Organizacoes de usarios de drogas, coceitos sobre usarios de drogas injetaveis e o HIV

Chapter by: Friedman, Samuel R; Neaigus, A
in: Toxicomania by Inem, Clara Lucia (Ed)
Rio de Janeiro : NEPAD/UERJ, [1997]
pp. 129-140
ISBN: 9788573880366
CID: 4844832

Never again [Poem]

Friedman, Samuel
ORIGINAL:0015101
ISSN: 0743-2259
CID: 4874352

Little Alfred [Poem]

Friedman, Samuel
ORIGINAL:0015100
ISSN: 0743-2259
CID: 4874342

I had no life to write about [Poem]

Friedman, Samuel
ORIGINAL:0015099
ISSN: 0743-2259
CID: 4874332

Crabs [Poem]

Friedman, Samuel
ORIGINAL:0015098
ISSN: 0743-2259
CID: 4874322

Imagine [Poem]

Friedman, Samuel R
ORIGINAL:0015049
ISSN: 1042-8232
CID: 4856522

The transition from underground to legal syringe exchange: the New York City experience

Kochems, L M; Paone, D; Des Jarlais, D C; Ness, I; Clark, J; Friedman, S R
The most common method of syringe exchange program (SEP) development in the United States has been for SEPs to be started by activists without funding and then to become a government-funded community-based organization. This developmental process, which has not been studied to date, involves major organizational change. We report our findings on three New York City syringe exchanges experiencing this type of transition. Our data illustrate that following legalization, increased legitimacy and funding allowed all three SEPs to expand the size and scope of their programs (e.g., adding hours, sites, referral services, and the ability to support user groups), resulting in a rapid growth in participation (over 15,000 in 18 months). Regulation accompanying legalization posed significant challenges to SEPs, including added record-keeping and reporting tasks, increased demand for referrals, and accommodating evaluation, which affected already overburdened staffs. The transition process poses significant challenges to these developing organizations as well as opportunities for improved services.
PMID: 9010508
ISSN: 0899-9546
CID: 3603002

Network methodologies, contact tracing, gonorrhea, and human immunodeficiency virus [Editorial]

Friedman, S R
PMID: 8946641
ISSN: 0148-5717
CID: 4842642

Injection drug use and emerging blood-borne diseases [Letter]

Des Jarlais, D C; Stimson, G V; Hagan, H; Friedman, S R
PMID: 8847757
ISSN: 0098-7484
CID: 171192