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Posts Tagged ‘HIV’

With the possibility of an HIV/AIDS impact evaluation study on the horizon and as I polish my job talk about the demand for HIV/AIDS interventions in Africa, I’ve been reading a lot about HIV prevention interventions. Here are some recent finds on the web:
Ugandan Insomniac shares this image from the Ugandan AIDS Vaccine Newsletter.
And, until [...]

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So much of the money for HIV/AIDS interventions is spent on treating the sick that I wonder how much we value prevention. Recent work modeling the impact of immediate availability of antiretroviral therapy on HIV incidence suggest treating the HIV-infected would curb transmission (see January 2009 issue of The Lancet). Mead Over at the Center [...]

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Circumcision of HIV-infected men did not reduce HIV transmission to female partners over 24 months in a randomized controlled trial in Rakai, Uganda.
AIDS prevention message for the “real” African man.
Elizabeth Pisani reviews The Politics and History of AIDS Treatment in Brazil for The Lancet.
What AIDS is like in South Africa, from the eyes of a [...]

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Most days I talk about how I wish I didn’t study AIDS because I think it’s an overdone topic receiving too much attention when there are other problems with wider impacts affecting rural Africa. But, honestly, there’s another reason why I wish I studied something else: AIDS is sad. Interviewing people sick with AIDS is [...]

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Last month, I presented a chapter from my dissertation about local demand for AIDS intervention. The findings are somewhat controversial in that there’s a serious misalignment in policy priorities: we in the West have spent a lot on HIV/AIDS, whereas ordinary Africans have stated preferences prioritizing other public policy problems. The discussion was lively to [...]

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US President Obama has named Eric Goosby as Global AIDS Coordinator, making him the administrator of the President’s Emergency Fund for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Blogger Texas in Africa has hope that the new appointment and the reign of Obama will bring about some change, in particular, a better dose of prevention. Yes, prevention is important, [...]

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