HARP: HIV/AIDS, Malaria, and Tuberculosis Resource Project
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Community Response
* AIDS in Malaysia
By Jit Singh, Sulaiman Che'Rus, Susan Chong, Yee Khim Chong, & Nick Crofts, AIDS 1994, 8 (Suppl 2), International Medical College, 21, Jalan Selangor, 46050 Petaling Jaya, Malaysia.
Review of analysis of information on the spread of HIV in Malaysia to the end of 1993, and the government and NGO response to the epidemic and the threat of developing epidemics.
* An Evaluation of the Integrated Community Based Home Care Model
By Leana R. Uys, Hospice Association of Southern Africa, P.O. Box 38785, Pinelands, 7430, South Africa, June 2000.
Provides an evaluation of the Hospice Association of Southern Africa's integrated community-based home care model for the care of People With AIDS at seven sites across South Africa. The objective of the program was fourfold: 1) to describe the implementation process, barriers to implementation and essentials for success of the ICHC model; 2) to describe the outcome of this model for the three partner institutions in terms of work load, burden and other aspects; 3) to assess the satisfaction of consumers with the model; and 4) to analyze the cost, replicability and sustainability of this model.
* Household and Community Response to HIV/AIDS in Asia: The Case of Thailand and India
By Shalini Bharat, Anchalee Singhanetra-Renard, & Peter Aggleton, AIDS 1998, 12 (Suppl B), Unit for Family Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Deonar, Mumbai, India.
Reports on the ways in which households and communities are responding to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in parts of the Asian region with particular focus on care and support issues.
* Involving the Communities: AIDS in Australia and New Zealand
Nick Crofts, John Ballard, Jane Chetwynd, Nigel Dickson, Warren Lindberg, & Charles Watson, AIDS 1994, 8 (Suppl 2), Epidemiology and International Health, Macfarlane Burnet Centre for Medical Research, P.O. Box 254, Fairfield, Victoria 3078, Australia.
Details the effect of HIV/AIDS in the gay community, as well as the early and active involvement of affected groups in the response. Also discusses the apparent prevention of spread of HIV among most groups of injecting drug users.
* Time to Act: The Pacific Response to HIV and AIDS
United Nations, Suva, Fiji, January 1996.
The report highlights three critical aspects of the HIV epidemic: the vulnerability of Pacific societies to the spread of the HIV virus; the importance of being able to choose how to protect oneself, one's family and friends; and the central nature of the status of women. It also documents that people within the region are already responding to the epidemic.
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Last Updated: Monday, February 21, 2005