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Searching with a thematic focus on HIV and AIDS in Uganda
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Responses by faith-based organizations to orphans and vulnerable children: preliminary study of six countries in Africa
United Nations Children's Fund, 2003This study, published by UNICEF and the World Conference of Religions for Peace, draws attention to the roles of faith-based responses to HIV/AIDS in the six African countries it surveyed (Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Swaziland and Uganda).DocumentNutritional care and support for people living with HIV/AIDS in Uganda: guidelines for service providers
Food and Nutrition Technical Assistance Project, 2004This document is a set of guidelines which outlines the nutritional needs of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA), and includes the steps that service providers can take to help PLWHA manage symptoms and improve health through nutrition.DocumentTeacher training: essential for school-based reproductive health and HIV/AIDS education: focus on sub-saharan Africa
YouthNet, Family Health International, 2004For teaching information and skills related to HIV/AIDS, teacher training is essential, and complex. In sub-Saharan Africa, up to half of all new HIV infections are occurring among youth under age 25. Since most youth attend school at least for primary education, school-based programmes are a logical place to reach young people.DocumentThe role of behavior change in the decline in HIV prevalence in Uganda
Alan Guttmacher Institute, 2002Accumulating evidence supports the conclusion that HIV prevalence has declined significantly in Uganda during the 1990s, probably accompanied by a somewhat smaller decline in HIV incidence. However, the magnitude of the change at national level is likely to have been smaller than reported in some sources.DocumentUK’s call for action on HIV/AIDS
Department for International Development, UK, 2003This DFID policy document on HIV/AIDS outlines key issues in the global epidemic and the UK’s commitment to tackling the epidemic.DocumentLessons learned from mainstreaming HIV into the poverty eradication action plan in Uganda
John Snow International UK, 2003In 1991 Uganda was the first country to adopt a multi-sectoral approach to HIV. It has since been hailed as a Sub Saharan African success story. HIV prevalence has declined from a high of 20% in 1992 to 6.1% in 2001.DocumentThe environment, natural resources and HIV/AIDS
Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, 2003This short report looks at impacts of HIV/AIDS on agriculture and the environment, with a focus on rural areas in Africa.DocumentHIV/AIDS and agriculture: impacts and responses: case studies from Namibia, Uganda and Zambia
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2003How can countries support increasing numbers of vulnerable households? What can be done to reverse the trend towards increasing destitution?DocumentA, B and C in Uganda: the roles of abstinence, monogamy and condom use in HIV decline
Alan Guttmacher Institute, 2003Policymakers around the world look to Uganda as a role model in the fight against HIV/AIDS, because of its success in reducing HIV rates.DocumentTranscending boundaries to improve the food security of AIDS affected households in rural Uganda
International Center for Research on Women, USA, 2003This paper from the International Center for Research on Women provides information on the implementation of a collaborative project to improve household food security in rural Ugandan communities affected by HIV and AIDS. The aim of the project is increased collaboration between communities and specialists to improve the ability of households to meet their food security needs.Pages
