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ISSUE ADDRESSED: The Australian response to HIV oversaw one of the most rapid and sustained changes in community behaviour in Australia's health-promotion history. The combined action of communities of gay men, sex workers, people who inject drugs, people living with HIV and clinicians working in partnership with government, public health and research has been recognised for many years as highly successful in minimising the HIV epidemic. …
This guide is one in a series of Good Practice Guides produced by the International HIV/AIDS Alliance. It was developed for programme officers and other people who develop or deliver HIV programmes globally, and especially in the global South. It is intended as a reference guide to support your ongoing work. It provides practical information for programme level staff in organisations responding to HIV and helps define good practice for the meaningful involvement of people living with HIV. The guide is organised with these different needs in mind. …
This toolkit is a practical resource to improve the quality and impact of HIV-related legal services and to expand their availability. The toolkit provides guidance on factors to be taken into account when designing and scaling up an HIV-related legal services program. It also provides guidance about different models and approaches for delivering, monitoring and evaluating HIV-related legal services, and gives information about resource mobilization.
Après une analyse de la situation nationale, l'équipe de planification stratégique à formulé une politique de planification à adopter par l'Etat algérien. Les orientations stratégiques (2002-2006) identifiées lors de la phase diagnostique, proposent des améliorations dans les domaines de la coordination, de la surveillance épidémiologique, de l'information, des PVVIH et enfin du suivi et de la prise en charge des personnes et des groupes vulnérables. Les grandes priorités dégagées lors de la phase d'analyse sont : 1. …
Why are many HIV policies out of tune with the requirements of the epidemic and why do the more appropriate policies fail to perform as expected? Answering these questions involves understanding more about the way in which problems are defined and agendas are set, the processes through which ideas and knowledge become policies, and the demands and incentives facing decision-makers. This paper examine the interactions among institutions, interests and ideas in HIV policies in low-and middle-income countries (LMIC) to get a better sense of what has led to particular policy outcomes. …