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You are here: Reference Library Stigma and Discrimination Displaying items by tag: Antiretroviral Drugs and Therapy (ART)
Displaying items by tag: Antiretroviral Drugs and Therapy (ART)
Treatment 2.0: Is This the Future of Treatment? UNAIDS (2010)The latest studies show that a reduction in new HIV infections of up to a third could be achieved globally if there is a radical overhaul of the way that the world provides antiretroviral therapy and if global leaders meet their commitments of ensuring that all people in need of treatment are on it.

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Children’s Art Adherence Resource Pack: Guide for Trainers. Adherence Networking Group (2006)Training materials for a 4-day training course on counselling to support children’s adherence to ART.

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Factsheet N°4: Anti‐Retroviral Therapy (ART) Services in Nepal. National Centre for AIDS and STD Control Teku, Kathmandu (2009)Facts and Figures on ART in Nepal: - Anti‐retroviral treatment started in Nepal in February 2004 from Teku Hospital. - Government is providing free of cost ART service for all those in need. - There is a National ART Guidelines and SOP for the clinical management of ART in Nepal.

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“3 by 5” Progress Report 2004. UNAIDS and WHO (2005)In the second half of 2004, the number of people on antiretroviral (ARV) therapy in developing and transitional countries increased dramatically from 440 000 to an estimated 700 000. This figure represents about 12% of the approximately 5.8 million people currently needing treatment in developing and transitional countries and includes people receiving ARV therapy supported by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, the World Bank and other partners.

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Recurrent Costs of India’s Free ART Program. Gupta I, Trivedi M and Kandamuthan S (2009)In April 2004, the government of India announced the Free Antiretroviral Treatment (ART) Program, which brought first-line antiretroviral (ARV) drugs within the reach of a much larger pool of ARV-eligible individuals. However, the full costs of providing treatment, the share of costs across enti- ties involved directly or indirectly in the program, and the possible financial implications of a more scaled-up program were not much discussed or ana- lyzed in the country, leaving open many questions regarding the cost of the program and the implications of scaling up access to treatment.

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Scaling up Antiretroviral Treatment: Lessons Learnt from Thailand. WHO and MOPH Thailand (2007) This is the report of the third joint antiretroviral treatment (ART) programme review for Thailand since the programme started in 1992. Based on the recommendations of the first review held in 1995, the Ministry of Public Health (MOPH), Thailand started a pilot programme for the prevention of mother-to- child transmission (PMTCT) of HIV in north-east and northern Thailand, along with the establishment of a HIV/AIDS clinical research network. This was followed, in 2000, by large-scale implementation of the national PMTCT programme in public hospitals. The second joint programme review, conducted in July 2000, recommended expansion of quality ART services to cover all government hospitals following the example of the national PMTCT programme.

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who treatment cover

The document outlines how UNAIDS and WHO will work with partner organizations to accelerate global efforts to scale up treatment towards sustained universal access, optimizing both HIV specific and broader health outcomes, including maximizing the HIV and TB preventive benefits of ART. It reflects the need for innovation, for efficiency gains, for shifts in how programmes are financed and delivered, and for additional investments up front that will ultimately reduce costs in the medium and long-term.


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Scaling Up Antiretroviral Therapy in Resource-Poor Settings: A Selected Annotated Bibliography. WHO (2004)This annotated bibliography is intended as a resource for policy makers, programme managers and other personnel working in HIV/AIDS control in developing countries. The aim of this bibliography is to provide representative examples of developing country’ experiences on the effectiveness and programmatic challenges for scaling up adult national antiretroviral treatment programmes.

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