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Preventing HIV in developing countries : biomedical and behavioral approaches
Laura Gibney,Ralph J. DiClemente,Sten H. Vermund +2 more
- 01 Jan 1999
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TL;DR: The Use of Psychosocial Models for Guiding the Design and Implementation of HIV Prevention Interventions: Translating Theory into Practice G.R. Raj, et al.
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Abstract: HIV Prevention in Developing Countries: Tenets of Behavioral and Biomedical Approaches L Gibney The Global HIV/AIDS Pandemic: Trends and Patterns D Tarantola, et al Emerging Biomedical Interventions L Lawson, et al Intervening in Blood Supply and Use Systems: HIV Testing NT Constantine, et al The Evolution of Voluntary Testing and Counseling as an HIV Prevention Strategy SA Allen, et al Controlling Other Sexually Transmitted Diseases G Dallabetta, et al Behavioral Interventions KR O'Reilly, et al Insights for HIV Prevention from Industrialized Countries' Experience A Raj, et al The Use of Psychosocial Models for Guiding the Design and Implementation of HIV Prevention Interventions: Translating Theory into Practice GM Wingood, RJ DiClemente Interventions for Commercial Sex Workers and Their Clients EN Ngugi, et al Interventions for Adolescents P Aggleton, K Rivers Interventions for Workers Away from Their Families M Haour-Knipe, et al Interventions for Injecting Drug Users AS Abdul-Quader, et al Interventions for Men Who Have Sex with Men P Aggleton, et al HIV Prevention for the General Population PR Lamptey, GAW Goodridge Intervention Research for Future HIV Prevention: Design and Implementation Considerations L Gibner Index
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Citations
Burden of HIV among female sex workers in low-income and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Stefan Baral,Chris Beyrer,Kathryn E. Muessig,Tonia Poteat,Andrea L. Wirtz,Michele R. Decker,Susan G. Sherman,Deanna Kerrigan +7 more
TL;DR: Although data characterising HIV risk among female sex workers is scarce, the burden of disease is disproportionately high and suggests an urgent need to scale up access to quality HIV prevention programmes.
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Combination HIV prevention for female sex workers: what is the evidence?
Linda-Gail Bekker,Leigh F. Johnson,Frances M. Cowan,Cheryl Overs,Donela Besada,Sharon L. Hillier,Willard Cates +6 more
TL;DR: Evidence indicates that effective HIV prevention packages for sex workers should include combinations of biomedical, behavioural, and structural interventions tailored to local contexts, and be led and implemented by sex worker communities.
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Women's reasons for not participating in follow up visits before starting short course antiretroviral prophylaxis for prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV: qualitative interview study
Thomas M. Painter,Kassamba L Diaby,Danielle M Matia,Lillian S. Lin,Toussaint S. Sibailly,Moïse K Kouassi,Ehounou R. Ekpini,Thierry H. Roels,Stefan Z. Wiktor +8 more
TL;DR: Difficulties experienced by women during their contacts with staff working on the prevention programme and negative views that they have about the programme can contribute to their non-participation in prophylaxis.
148
Sociodemographic context of the AIDS epidemic in a rural area in Tanzania with a focus on people's mobility and marriage
J T Boerma,Mark Urassa,Soori Nnko,J. Z. L. Ng'weshemi,Raphael Isingo,Basia Zaba,Gabriel Mwaluko +6 more
TL;DR: The most cost-effective intervention strategy may be to focus on the trading centre in which mobility is higher, bars were more common, and HIV prevalence and incidence were considerably higher than in the nearby rural villages.
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