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Structuring Health Services to Meet Women’s Needs
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Antenatal Care - Treatment
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Female Sex Workers
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HIV Testing and Counseling for Women
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Promoting Women’s Leadership
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Showing 1 - 8 of 8 Results for "
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Links are needed between religious leaders and health facilities. A study found that religious leaders wanted to refer people living with HIV for counseling and up to date information on HIV but did not know where to advise people to go.
HIV Testing and Counseling for Women
1 study
Strategies need to be identified to empower women to create demand for improved maternal health services and challenge violations of their rights in facility-based childbirth. This is a particularly acute need for women living with HIV. Studies show that HIV-related stigma may reduce the likelihood of delivering in a health facility
Antenatal Care - Treatment
1 study
Ongoing efforts are needed for safe needle disposal. Studies found that used sharp needles were observed inside and outside facilities and that neither adequate disposal methods nor separation of medical waste from domestic waster occurred in health facilities.
Structuring Health Services to Meet Women’s Needs
1 study
Health care provider training is needed to increase confidentiality and decrease discrimination against sex workers seeking health services. Studies found that significant proportions of female and transgender sex workers did not visit health facilities because of lack of confidentiality, discrimination, and lack of counseling when accessing HIV testing.
Female Sex Workers
1 study
Interventions are needed to foster the involvement of HIV-positive women and promote cooperation between people living with HIV and AIDS and health care facilities, government and other agencies creating HIV-related programs and policies. Studies found that little cooperation existed between HIV-positive women and health facilities but that efforts have been underway to educate parliamentarians concerning HIV-positive women’s issues.
Promoting Women’s Leadership
1 study
Interventions are needed to improve quality of HIV treatment and care within health services. Studies found that guidelines for counseling were missing from facilities and that clients were referred for HIV testing and counseling in geographically distant locations based on donor preference.
Structuring Health Services to Meet Women’s Needs
1 study
A combination of infection control strategies may significantly reduce the rate of TB transmission, including drug-resistant TB, in high-risk, low-resourced health care settings. A mathematical model was created to simulate TB transmission in high TB/HIV prevalent settings. The model showed that masks alone would prevent 10% of new transmission in an overall epidemic, but could prevent a large proportion of XDR-TB cases among hospital staff. The combination of mask and reduced hospitalization with a shift to outpatient treatment could prevent nearly one-third of XDR-TB cases. Approximately 48% of XDR-TB cases could be averted by the end of 2012, if a combination of mask, reduced hospitalization with shift to outpatient treatment, improved ventilation, rapid drug resistance testing, HIV treatment and TB isolation facilities for highly infectious patients were implemented.
Structuring Health Services to Meet Women’s Needs
1 study
Interventions are needed to sustain viral suppression and reduce loss to follow up once a woman has initiated Option B+, including affordable means of monitoring virological response and effective adherence counseling. Research is needed on how long is optimal to provide care within maternal health systems or when to transfer cART provision outside of maternal health systems. Compared to people who started cART for their own health, a study found that women who started cART while pregnant were 5 times less likely to return to the clinics after the initial visit. Women who started cART while breastfeeding were twice as likely to miss their first follow up appointment. On average, 17% of pregnant women who started ART under Option B+ dropped out of care in the first six months of ART and 22% dropped out within one year (Tenhathi et al., 2014). Systems are rarely in place to track mothers six weeks post-partum (Psaros et al., 2015; Waiswa, 2016). A survey found that ART retention was greatest in those facilities where newly diagnosed pregnant women living with HIV were referred from ANC to the ART clinic in the same facility for initiation and follow up or were referred to facilities serving as ART referral sites that did not provide ANC (van Lettow et al., 2014). A review noted that women found challenges in accessing cART either through maternal care systems, postpartum or through HIV care. Input from pregnant and postpartum women living with HIV is needed
Antenatal Care - Treatment
1 study
Prevention for Women
Male and Female Condom Use
Partner Reduction
Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision
Treating Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs)
Treatment as Prevention
Prevention for Key Affected Populations
Female Sex Workers
Women Who Use Drugs and Female Partners of Men Who Use Drugs
Women Prisoners and Female Partners of Male Prisoners
Women and Girls in Complex Emergencies
Migrant Women and Female Partners of Male Migrants
Transgender Women and Men
Women Who Have Sex With Women (WSW)
Prevention and Services for Adolescents and Young People
Mitigating Risk
Increasing Access to Services
HIV Testing and Counseling for Women
Treatment
Provision and Access
Adherence and Support
Staying Healthy and Reducing Transmission
Meeting the Sexual and Reproductive Health Needs of Women Living With HIV
Safe Motherhood and Prevention of Vertical Transmission
Preventing Unintended Pregnancies
Pre-Conception
Antenatal Care - Testing and Counseling
Antenatal Care - Treatment
Delivery
Postpartum
Preventing, Detecting and Treating Critical Co-Infections
Tuberculosis
Malaria
Hepatitis
Strengthening the Enabling Environment
Transforming Gender Norms
Addressing Violence Against Women
Advancing Human Rights and Access to Justice for Women and Girls
Promoting Women’s Employment, Income and Livelihood Opportunities
Advancing Education
Reducing Stigma and Discrimination
Promoting Women’s Leadership
Care and Support
Women and Girls
Orphans and Vulnerable Children
Structuring Health Services to Meet Women’s Needs