keyword: | India |
Resource
Case Study
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Both NGO and community-based organization (CBO) approaches can benefit HIV program management. This case study explores the significant role of com |
The Samastha Project aimed to provide a comprehensive program of networked HIV prevention, treatment, care and support services for most-at-risk po |
In Andhra Pradesh, India, the Samastha Project utilized an innovative community-based micro-planning process to train HIV peer outreach workers. Th |
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In Karnataka, India, HIV testing and counseling services have revealed unexpectedly high levels of TB-HIV co-infection. In response, the Samastha P |
Social stigma and fear impede HIV prevention, treatment, care, and support efforts. This case study examines how a collaboration led by the Avert P |
In areas of high HIV prevalence, people living with HIV often fail to adhere to their treatment not because HIV care is unavailable, but because th |
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There continues to be a tremendous focus on enrolling people in treatment programs and ensuring that they remain in care. This case study examines |
In India, most new HIV infections are concentrated in specific groups within the population and in certain areas of the country. To effectively r |
Integrating strategies to address gender inequity and change harmful gender norms is an increasingly important component of HIV programs. Howev |
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Launched in 2003, the Avahan-India HIV prevention program has become a global model for combination HIV prevention programming that meets the compl |
Through their innovative Community Popular Opinion Leader (CPOL) approach, the Y.R. Gaitonde Center for AIDS Research and Education (Y.R.G. CARE) p |
Recent studies confirm that globally men who have sex with men (MSM) are at significantly greater risk for HIV infection than other adults of repro |
Promising Practice
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The project was organized to promote the use of health services and STI treatment for sex workers to reduce HIV incidence. The |
Technical Consultation Material
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February 2009, India - This meeting centered on a discussion of essential program dimensions that must be part of any effort to reach MARP
capacity building, commercial sex workers (CSWs), community engagement, community mobilization, concentrated epidemics, generalized epidemics, human rights, men who have sex with men (MSM), mixed epidemics, monitoring and evaluation (M&E), most-at-risk populations (MARPs), people who inject drugs (PWID), universal access
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Spotlight
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In countries battling the most severe HIV epidemics in the world, there is yet another powerful and under-addressed structural force at play: the u |



