HIV/AIDS Data Hub for the Asia-Pacific Region
 
You are here: Bangladesh: Reference Library National Policies/National Strategic Framework Plans/Guidelines/Laws
National Policies/National Strategic Framework Plans/Guidelines/Laws
Sri Lanka National HIV/AIDS Strategic Plan 2007-2011. National STD and AIDS Control Programme Sri Lanka (2007)HIV infection was first detected in Sri Lanka in 1987 and it will continue to be with us for many decades to come. The estimated number of people living with HIV as at the end of 2007 is around 3500-4000. Hence, Sri Lanka is considered a country with a low prevalence of HIV infection. However, a gradual increase in new cases is being observed and the feminization of theepidemicisemerging. Thepresenceofcertainsocio-demographicandbehaviouralfactors may change the present HIV landscape.

Download this publication

Recommended HIV/AIDS Strategies for Hong Kong 2007-2011. Hong Kong Advisory Council on AIDS (2007)The Hong Kong Advisory Council on AIDS, in its mandate to advise the Government on policies relating to the prevention, care and control of HIV infection and AIDS in Hong Kong, developed this new Strategies for year 2007-2011. The document serves as the blueprint for the collective AIDS effort in the next five years, in response to the changing local epidemic.

Download this publication

Harm Reduction Practical Guidelines 2008-2010 Phase 1. National AIDS Control Program Afghanistan (2007)Since 1985 there has been increasing global recognition that drug users who share needles, syringes and other injecting equipment are at high risk of transmitting blood borne viral diseases like HIV and hepatitis B and C

Download this publication

Implementing Operational Research in Global Fund-Supported Disease Control Programmes. WHO (2007)Operational research is key to the improvement of programmes aimed at disease prevention, treatment and care, and applicants are encouraged to use a percentage of the resources they obtain from GFATM on relevant studies to improve programme implementation and the quality of services provided.

Download this publication

Vietnam National Monitoring and Evaluation Framework for HIV Prevention and Control Programs. Viet Nam Administration of HIV/AIDS Control (2007)The Government of Viet Nam is committed to expanding HIV prevention, treatment and care interventions. A number of national policies, action plans and guidelines have been issued to support these interventions. Although a wide range of HIV activities are now underway in Viet Nam, senior leadership has recognized that more needs to be done to assess the effectiveness of these activities.

Download this publication

National Strategic Plan on HIV/AIDS Republic of Maldives 2007 – 2011. National AIDS Council Maldives (2007)Maldives has so far experienced a low level HIV epidemic. A recent situation analysis “The HIV/AIDS Situation in the Republic of the Maldives in 2006” has pointed out several factors that demonstrate vulnerability to an increasing epidemic: increasing drug use, increasing injecting drug use and the presence of hidden populations of commercial sex and men who have sex with men in the archipelago.

Download this publication

National AIDS Commission 2007-2010 HIV and AIDS Response Strategies. National AIDS Commission Indonesia (2007)These 2007-2010 HIV and AIDS Response Strategies are intended to serve
as guidelines for a joint response to HIV and AIDS involving the government
sector (at the center and in the regions), the non-governmental sector, civil society and our international partners.

Download this publication

Myanmar National Strategic Plan on HIV and AIDS: 2006-2010. Ministry of Health Union of Myanmar (2007)The HIV epidemics in Myanmar remain largely concentrated among people identified with high-risk behaviours, in particular sex workers and their clients, injecting drug users and men having sex with men; and populations identified as highly vulnerable on the basis of their young age, gender, mobility and social or occupational characteristics. This focus of the epidemics calls for the urgent strengthening of prevention, care and treatment programmes addressing primarily the needs of these populations. The responses to the HIV epidemic to date have been diverse and great sources of learning, and demonstrated the capacity to respond to the HIV epidemic successfully in Myanmar, but are not being implemented to a scale sufficiently enough to slow down the epidemic or mitigate its impact.

Download this publication

Page 7 of 19