Search

Reset

Searching with a thematic focus on Health systems, HIV and AIDS treatment and care, HIV and AIDS

Showing 71-80 of 107 results

Pages

  • Document

    Rethinking food aid to fight AIDS

    International Food Policy Research Institute, 2003
    This paper from the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) highlights the implications of the AIDS pandemic for food aid strategy and programming.
  • Document

    Treating 3 million by 2005: making it happen, the WHO strategy

    World Health Organization, 2003
    In 2001, partners within the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) and other organisations along with scientists at the World Health Organization (WHO) calculated that, under optimal conditions, 3 million people living in developing countries could be provided with antiretroviral therapy and access to medical services by the end of 2005.
  • Document

    Health sector responses to HIV/AIDS and treatment access in southern Africa: addressing equity

    EQUINET: Network for Equity in Health in Southern Africa, 2003
    All people with HIV/AIDS should have equal opportunity to access effective and appropriate treatment. Factors affecting access to treatment include existing social and health inequities, widespread poverty, high rates of new HIV infections, famine and budgetary constraints.
  • Document

    Impact of public-private partnerships addressing access to pharmaceuticals in low-income countries: Uganda pilot study

    Initiative on Public-Private Partnerships for Health, 2003
    The UK Department for International Development (DFID) funded the Initiative on Public-Private Partnerships for Health (IPPPH) to conduct a pilot study in Uganda to assess the health and health systems impact of public-private partnerships (PPPs) for improving access to pharmaceuticals.
  • Document

    Tackling HIV in resource poor countries

    British Medical Journal, 2003
    Prevention of HIV infection is often promoted as the only feasible option in resource poor settings despite the existence of drugs to treat it. As recently as 2002, experts argued that prevention should take priority over treatment for AIDS in Africa based on cost effectiveness.
  • Document

    Equity in health sector responses to HIV/AIDS in Tanzania

    EQUINET: Network for Equity in Health in Southern Africa, 2003
    It is estimated that globally there are 42 million people suffering from AIDS of whom 29.4 million are found in Sub- Saharan Africa. HIV/AIDS was first described in 1983 in Tanzania, and has since spread dramatically.
  • Document

    HIV/AIDS, equity and health sector personnel in southern Africa

    EQUINET: Network for Equity in Health in Southern Africa, 2003
    In the health sector, HIV/AIDS increases the demand for care, the level and complexity of work and the risk of infection, whilst also placing a strain on resources. These burdens exacerbate problems of sickness, absenteeism and workload, increasing losses of health workers.
  • Document

    Prevention or care? What works best in the fight against AIDS?

    id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002
    What is the best way of fighting AIDS?  What is the right balance to strike between health education, treatment of the disease and caring for AIDS sufferers?
  • Document

    Equity in health sector responses to HIV/AIDS in Malawi

    EQUINET: Network for Equity in Health in Southern Africa, 2003
    In Malawi, HIV/AIDS has created an increasing demand for healthcare, exacerbated by population pressure, chronic poverty and food insecurity. This demand is set against a reduced capacity to supply healthcare.
  • Document

    Surmounting challenges: procurement of antiretroviral medicines in low- and middle-income countries

    Access to Essential Medicines Campaign, MSF, 2003
    As the price of antiretrovirals (ARVs) in low- and middle-income countries has fallen in recent years, governments, international agencies and non-governmental organisations have been able to start developing treatment programmes for people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA).

Pages