Search Results
Results 451 - 500 of 988
< 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 >
Piot P - - 2001
The scale of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/AIDS epidemic has exceeded all expectations since its identification 20 years ago. Globally, an estimated 36 million people are currently living with HIV, and some 20 million people have already died, with the worst of the epidemic centred on sub-Saharan Africa. But just ...
McQuiston C - - 2001
Latinos are disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS. The need for community-based AIDS prevention programs that are culture specific is well recognized. Lay Health Advisor (LHA) interventions are a culturally appropriate way to provide information about HIV/AIDS to community members. LHA programs use natural helpers in the community to disseminate information through ...
James J S - - 2001
This key moment in history offer the chance for a breakthrough in world health for AIDS and many other conditions, as political consensus demands that over 20 million people with HIV not be left to die without treament. We believe that instead of seeking earmarked HIV funding, the AIDS community ...
Campsmith M - - 2001
During the past 20 years, the epidemic of human immunodeficiency virus and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in the United States has continually evolved. Beginning in the mid-1990s, the numbers of annual AIDS cases and AIDS deaths have decreased, due in large measure to effective combination anti-retroviral therapies, which prolong the survival ...
Card J J - - 2001
This article describes the methods used and findings obtained in establishing the HIV/AIDS Prevention Program Archive (HAPPA), a collection of effective HIV/AIDS prevention programs in a box. The HAPPA collection builds on a previously established collection of 13 effective HIV/AIDS/sexually transmitted disease (STD) prevention programs for adolescents known as PASHA, ...
Attaran A - - 2001
The international aid effort against AIDS is greatly incommensurate with the severity of the epidemic. Drawing on the data that international aid donors self-reported to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), we find that, between 1996 and 1998, finance from all rich countries to sub-Saharan Africa for projects ...
Buergin, Reiner
In December 1991 the Wildlife Sanctuaries Thung Yai Naresuan and Huai Kha Khaeng in Thailand were declared a heritage to mankind by UNESCO due to their outstanding universal value regarding global biodiversity. For conservationists this was a great success in their long lasting efforts to protect the forest area against ...
Whiteside A - - 2001
The rapid spread of HIV in the 1980s and 1990s in the non-industrialised world is now leading to an AIDS epidemic. This in turn is having a demographic and economic impact on these societies. This article assesses the most recent evidence for these impacts. It concludes that, while there is ...
Songwathana P - - 2001
The problems that face HIV/AIDS patients are now fairly well documented. These include experiences of guilt, anger, grief, fear of abandonment, and potential economic hardship and marginalization due to others' fear of infection and associated stigma. However, limited attention has been paid to the effects of AIDS-related stigma on access ...
Piot P - - 2001
More assertive political leadership in the global response to AIDS in both poor and rich countries culminated in June 2001 at the UN General Assembly Special Session on AIDS. Delegates made important commitments there, and endorsed a global strategy framework for shifting the dynamics of the epidemic by simultaneously reducing ...
Casper C - - 2001
The acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), which is caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), was first described in the United States of America in 1981 [1]. The worldwide spread of HIV has soon been recognized and AIDS has become one of the most alarming infectious diseases of our days. Its ...
Abdurehman A - - 2001
Using secondary data from various sources, a model was adopted as installed in Demproj. software program to determine the demographic impact of HIV/AIDS epidemic in Addis Ababa. It was found that the adult HIV prevalence will reach a plateau level of about 10.8% in the year 2001 and 10.3% in ...
Kaldmäe P - - 2000
Estonia is a country with a low incidence rate of HIV infection, but a high rate of STDs. Drug use is increasing among young people, with an unknown number of users. A considerable number of IVDUs are infected with hepatitis B and C viruses. There are conditions for rapid spread ...
Ortiz-Torres B - - 2000
This article discusses the challenges faced by researchers and interventionists when attempting to promote change in social norms and normative beliefs that promote HIV/AIDS risk-related behaviors among Puerto Rican and Dominican women. The article focuses on the role of culture in HIV/AIDS prevention with women by analyzing the sociohistorical context ...
Barnett T - - 2000
Present and immediately foreseeable medical knowledge suggest that HIV infection cannot be avoided by vaccination and that an affordable cure for the resulting syndrome, AIDS, is a long way off. There is a strong possibility that Ukraine is confronted by an HIV epidemic which will spread into the general population ...
Tesoriero J M - - 2000
OBJECTIVES: The authors surveyed religious congregations in New York State to document the extent to which HIV/AIDS-related education and prevention services were being offered; to identify barriers to offering services; and to assess respondents' willingness to meet with HIV/AIDS service providers in their communities. METHODS: In October 1997, a questionnaire ...
Panter A T - - 2000
This study reports findings from six training projects designed to keep health providers up-to-date on emerging developments and approaches in HIV/AIDS care. Participants were 3,779 individuals who described themselves, their professional background, and their specific experience in the HIV/AIDS field. These characteristics were compared with their self-reported confidence in managing ...
- - 2000
The AIDS virus is spreading rapidly in China, with an estimated 500,000 Chinese infected, state-run newspapers reported September 8, 2000. Most are rural villagers using drugs, according to the reports. Testing has confirmed that 18,000 Chinese have the AIDS virus, HIV, leading health experts to project that all told, more ...
Lagarde E - - 2000
OBJECTIVES: To describe the association between religion and factors related to sexually transmitted diseases (STD)/AIDS in a country where religious leaders were involved early in prevention. DESIGN: A cross-sectional study conducted in a rural area in central Senegal. METHODS: Questionnaire-based interviews of a random sample of 858 adults from the ...
Bloom D E - - 2000
Business has transformed the planet. But this gives it new responsibilities. People now expect business leaders to lead--and not just respond when things go wrong. HIV/AIDS is a global problem, with over 16.3 million people now thought to have died of the disease (Global Summary of HIV/AIDS Epidemic, UNAIDS, December ...
Heckman T G - - 2000
Although AIDS mental health research has recently devoted more attention to the psychosocial needs of older adults living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease, studies of this population have typically combined older African-American and white participants into one large sample, thereby neglecting potential race differences. The current study examined race ...
Dancy B L - - 2000
BACKGROUND: Because an increasing number of chronically mentally ill individuals are HIV-positive, continuing education must include AIDS content to ensure psychiatric nurses provide competent care. The Fundamentals of Mental Health and HIV/AIDS Program was tested to determine its effectiveness in augmenting the AIDS knowledge of mental health professionals. METHOD: Two ...
Duffy T - - 2000
Infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is increasing in the heterosexual community and people already affected by HIV are living longer. As a result, health visitors will be more involved in caring for people with HIV and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). The aim of this study was to assess ...
Gayle H - - 2000
The HIV/AIDS epidemic is a global human tragedy, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. The pandemic affects people in the primer of their lives moving from at-risk populations to broader cross-sections of society. There have been more than 47 million adults and children infected since the beginning of the epidemic, and more ...
- - 2000
Urgent action is needed to fight the alarming spread of HIV/AIDS that infected 1.3 million people in Southeast Asia last year alone, Malaysia's foreign minister said July 24, 2000. Syed Hamid said the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) should tackle at regional and national level an epidemic that was ...
- - 2000
As world attention shifts to the problems of AIDS in Africa and other developing nations, it is clear that we need something other than "business as usual" if HIV-infected people are ever going to have access to treatment. The North American and European model, which relies on annual expenditures of ...
Schwartländer B - - 2000
As we enter the new millennium the world is still facing the challenge of responding to the AIDS pandemic. A new report from the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS presents the latest statistics on prevalence, spread, and impact of the disease. In their Perspective, Schwartländer and his colleagues discuss ...
Fleming P L - - 2000
The emergence of a new infectious disease, AIDS, in the early 1980s resulted in the development of a national AIDS surveillance system. AIDS surveillance data provided an understanding of transmission risks and characterized communities affected by the epidemic. Later, these data provided the basis for allocating resources for prevention and ...
Ndiwane A N - - 2000
Availability, access and utilization of essential health services present challenges to community health services in Sub-Saharan Africa. HIV/AIDS infection has added yet another dimension to a continent already experiencing economic crises. A primary prevention approach is emphasized as a means of addressing sexual behaviors that decrease risk of transmission. Educating ...
Ainsworth M - - 2000
The AIDS pandemic is a human tragedy that is threatening development in the poorest countries. There is no cure or vaccine, but the tools to control the epidemic already exist. Nevertheless, there are few examples of national AIDS control programmes that have had an impact on the epidemic. We (an ...
Normile D - - 2000
Official tallies count only 670 confirmed AIDS cases and 18,143 confirmed HIV-infected people among China's 1.2 billion population. Now changing social mores, including an increase in drug use and a boom in commercial sex, combined with a tainted blood supply, have led China to the brink of an AIDS explosion. ...
Binswanger H P - - 2000
The most important issue in the fight against HIV/AIDS is how to scale up existing programs that are only reaching small numbers of people to the national level. Here, I present suggestions on how to tackle the daunting challenge of building truly national HIV/AIDS programs, based on insights gained from ...
Gillieatt S J - - 2000
This Western Australian study analysed clinical information from 344 people with AIDS, and experiential data from a sample of 36 people with AIDS to investigate 2 relevant issues: the timing of HIV testing and uptake and experiences of HIV drug treatment. We found that the proportion of people presenting with ...
- - 2000
More than 90% of people living with HIV/AIDS are in the developing world, most of whom live in Africa, followed by Asia and Latin America. In an effort to increase awareness of the HIV epidemic in these regions, PI Perspective will feature short profiles of the epidemic in some of ...
Yeager R - - 2000
A survey was conducted to evaluate military human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) policies and programs in 119 countries. Ninety-eight percent of the 62 respondents provide prevention education, 95% in group settings but only 53% individually. Predeployment briefings are more common than postdeployment briefings. Condoms are promoted more often than ...
Bishop G D - - 2000
AIM OF STUDY: This study examines the beliefs and attitudes of Singapore doctors, dentists, and nurses concerning HIV/AIDS and persons living with HIV/AIDS (PWAs). METHOD: A mail survey was done of all doctors and dentists in Singapore as well as a random sample of 1,500 nurses from the Singapore Nursing ...
Pervilhac, Cyril
This thesis reports on a process of developing a new approach called the "Local Responses to HIV/Aids" undertaken in Gaoua District, Burkina Faso, between 1997 and 2000. It focuses on how communities, and organisations from the public and other sectors (voluntary, non and for profit, Churches) can develop more effective ...
Holtgrave D R - - 2000
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) funds provided to state, local, and territorial health departments for HIV-prevention activities are prioritized with the substantial involvement of HIV-prevention community planning groups (CPGs). This article examines whether or not these funds (more than $261 million in fiscal year 1998) are allocated ...
Macias-Chapula C A - - 2000
OBJECTIVES: In Haiti, AIDS has become the leading cause of death in sexually active adults. Increasingly, AIDS has become a disease of women and children. Previous bibliometric studies have shown the emergence of Haiti as a leading country in the production of AIDS literature in the Latin American and Caribbean ...
Wolffers I - - 2000
In the fight against the HIV/AIDS pandemic different approaches can be distinguished, reflecting professional backgrounds, world views and political interests. One important distinction is between the biomedical and the development paradigms. The biomedical paradigm is characterized by individualization and the concept of "risk". This again is related to the concept ...
Cameron T - - 2000
The epidemiology of AIDS has changed greatly in recent years and increasing numbers of poor, minority women with children now contract HIV/AIDS. As infected women succumb to AIDS, many of their children become orphans. The paper explores the ability and appropriateness of the current child welfare system to care for ...
Airhihenbuwa C O - - 2000
In response to the overwhelming burden of new cases of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), in 1997, initiated a project to examine the application of existing communication theories/models to HIV/acquired immune deficiency virus (AIDS) prevention ...
Myhre S L - - 2000
The mass media have been the primary method for disseminating human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) prevention messages worldwide. In this article, we update previous reviews by systematically examining published articles (n = 41) of empirical evaluations of international HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns. Of the 41 studies identified, 17 ...
Petchey R - - 2000
In England and Wales, departments of Genito-Urinary Medicine have led the clinical response to HIV infection and AIDS (HIV/AIDS). They provide an open-access self-referral service on a basis of strict confidentiality. People with HIV/AIDS have been found to be reluctant to involve their general practitioner (GP) in their care. Previous ...
- - 1999
Dr. Anthony Pramualratana, executive director of the Thailand Business Coalition on AIDS, spoke about the NGO response to HIV/AIDS. He cited examples of Business Houses around Asia cooperating to prevent the stigma of HIV/AIDS in the workplace. He said that special groups had now been setup in several countries to ...
Haour-Knipe M - - 1999
There are now a number of HIV/AIDS prevention programmes for migrant and ethnic minority communities throughout the world, both 'top down' programmes organised, for example, by governments and large NGOs, and 'bottom up' programmes, organised by migrant groups themselves. Evaluation of such programmes, however, is in most cases sorely lacking. ...
Boudin K - - 1999
In this article, female prisoners who are peer educators and counselors in an HIV/AIDS program at Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, New York State's only maximum security prison for women, describe the positive role of a peer support program. Using examples from their own experiences, the women discuss the strengths of ...
Davison D M - - 1999
Despite increased resources and funding, the rate of new HIV infections has not been contained within the African American community. Initiatives such as the culturally specific American Red Cross African American HIV/AIDS Program have enlisted thousands of volunteers in the fight against AIDS. This article reports the findings of a ...
Buse K - - 1999
A long-standing consensus that aid coordination should be owned by recipient authorities has been eclipsed by accord on the desirability of recipient management of aid along-side domestic resources. Nonetheless, in many low and lower-middle income countries, donors remain remarkably uncoordinated; where attempts at coordination are made, they are often donor-driven, ...
Walt G - - 1999
Aid coordination has assumed a prominent place on health policy agendas. This paper synthesizes the findings of research undertaken to explore the changing practices of aid coordination across a number of countries. It begins by reviewing the key issues giving rise to increased attention to aid coordination in the health ...
< 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 >