Search

Reset

Searching with a thematic focus on , ,

Showing 31-40 of 110 results

Pages

  • Document

    Relationships and Sex: A Guide for Women with HIV

    Terrence Higgins Trust, 2005
    Being HIV positive can often make you feel that it's just too difficult to have an intimate relationship with anyone. But you are the same person you were before you became HIV positive; your ability to form relationships need not alter because of HIV.
  • Document

    Women's Treatment Literacy Toolkit

    Southern Africa HIV/AIDS Information and Dissemination Service, 2005
    In Southern Africa, there are 13 women living with HIV for every 10 infected men, and this gap continues to widen.
  • Document

    HIV, AIDS and Women who Have Sex with Women

    SIDAnet - Lusophone Association, 2002
    Although sex between women is considered lower risk than heterosexual sex, it can still transmit HIV. Women who have sex with women (WSW) can reduce the risk of contracting HIV by being aware of their own HIV status and revealing it to their partner.
  • Document

    Sex, Life and the Female Condom: Some Views of HIV Positive Women

    Reproductive Health Matters, 2006
    This paper offers insights into the experiences of HIV positive women with the female condom, drawing on the responses of 18 ICW members to an email survey conducted in 2005. Major reported barriers to female condom use included cost and sporadic or limited access. All respondents talked about needing to negotiate the use of female condoms with their male sex partners.
  • Document

    Fact Sheet - Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights

    2006
    This short fact-sheet frames key issues and advocacy messages based on the findings of project work by ICW on the sexual and reproductive rights of HIV positive women.
  • Document

    Putting Women at the Centre: Critical Challenges in Effective Responses to HIV/AIDS

    Gender AIDS Forum, 2003
    Unequal power relations between men and women in South Africa at personal, relationship, household, community and societal levels and are key in the deepening impact of HIV and AIDS in the region. Policies exist to improve the position of women and girls, yet the realities of most women's lives have not improved significantly. The majority of HIV infections occur sexually.
  • Document

    "Man Hunt Intimacy: Man Clean Bathroom": Women, Sexual Pleasure, Gender Violence and HIV

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2006
    Men's contribution - or lack of it - to household tasks and expenditure and the daily burden of running a home is closely linked to sexual dissatisfaction, gender-based violence and HIV/AIDS. Men seek comfort by having sex with other women, and their wives also turn to other men for sex in order to buy school clothes for their children or food for the daily meal.
  • Document

    Reproductive Choice and Women Living with HIV/AIDS

    IPAS, 2002
    Prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) has become a major element of HIV/AIDS programmes. One unfortunate consequence of this is that women living with HIV/AIDS have been approached as 'vectors of HIV transmission'. Often they experience pressure from health care providers not to become pregnant.
  • Document

    Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs of Women and Adolescent Girls Living with HIV: Research Report on Qualitative Findings from Brazil, Ethiopia and the Ukraine

    United Nations Population Fund, 2006
    Despite the growing magnitude of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, health interventions that focus on providing care and treatment for HIV positive women have come at a slow pace. Most women do not know their HIV status until they become pregnant and are tested as a part of antenatal care.
  • Document

    Meeting the Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs of People Living with HIV

    Alan Guttmacher Institute, 2006
    As the prospects for people living with HIV have improved worldwide, AIDS activists and the global public health community have increased their focus on quality-of-life issues as well as length-of-life issues. Regardless of HIV status, the ability to express one's sexuality and the desire to experience parenthood are, for many, central to what it means to be human.

Pages