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You are here: Reference Library HIV Prevention Displaying items by tag: China
Displaying items by tag: China
State of World Population 2003. UNFPA (2003) According to spokesperson, Zhao Baige, the State Family Planning Commission of China is reorienting its large staff and resources toward reproductive health and HIV/AIDS: “We have a very big, complicated, and very effective network in China, with 400,000 staff….

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cover-coming-soon

Many injection drug users (IDUs) in China have high risk sexual behaviors that contribute to the spread of HIV infection. Although many IDUs in China move through drug rehabilitation centers, this opportunity for sexual health education has largely been overlooked.


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State of World Population 2003. UNFPA (2003) Overall HIV prevalence in China remains low – estimated at less than 0.1 per cent of the total population – but the epidemic continues to grow in all parts of China. HIV transmission associated with the sale of blood and blood plasma in central China in the 1990s appears largely contained and the majority of new HIV infections are related to injecting drug use and sexual transmission.

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State of World Population 2003. UNFPA (2003)

The dawn of a new millennium, the first United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS, the first Chinese Conference on HIV/AIDS & STD, and the dramatic explosion of HIV epidemics in many parts of China represent the background and rationale for the China UN Theme Group on HIV/AIDS (UNTG) to update its assessment of the HIV/AIDS situation and response in China.


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UNGASS Country Report of the Philippines January 2006 to December 2007. Philippine National AIDS Council (2008) China is a country with an overall low HIV prevalence and concentrated epidemic in focused areas and focused groups of people. Therefore, as recommended, we use the alternative indicator – HIV prevalence among sex workers (CSW), injecting drug users (IDU), and STI attendees, instead of the core indicator - percentage of young people aged 15-24 who are HIV-infected.


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HIV/STD Prevalence among MSM in Chengdu, China and Associated Risk Factors for HIV Infection. Feng Y, Wu Z, Detels R, et al (2010) Men who have sex with men (MSM) have been harshly and disproportionately impacted upon by HIV and continue to be a major driver of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the world. In the United States, MSM accounted for approximately 45% of newly reported HIV/AIDS diagnoses in 2006 and nearly 54% of cumulative AIDS diagnoses.

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Prevalence and Predictors of HIV Infection among Female Sex Workers in Kaiyuan City Yunnan Province China. Wang H, Chen R Y, Ding G, et al (2009)

Sexual transmission is the fastest growing route of HIV transmission in China. We
undertook this study to describe the risk factors for HIV infection in female sex workers (FSWs), and to determine the commercial sex venues where FSWs are most at risk of being infected with or infecting others with HIV.


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zun wu ppt

HIV Testing & Treatment as Prevention in China
National Center for AIDS/STD Control and Prevention
Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention


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towards msm TG 2011

‘Men who have sex with men’ and the corresponding acronym ‘MSM’ refer to all men who engage in homosexual behaviour, regardless of gender identity, motivation for engaging in sex, or identification with any particular ‘community’. The words ‘man’ and ‘sex’ are interpreted differently in diverse cultures and societies as well as by the individuals involved. As a result, the term MSM covers a large variety of settings and contexts in which male to-male sex takes place. The term ‘gay’ is used by some people to refer to a sexual identity that they apply to themselves and other men that is based on the sex they have with other men.


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cover-coming-soon

In accordance with the requirements set out in the 2012 Global AIDSProgress Report Preparation Guidelines(hereafter referred to as the Guidelines), the Ministry of Health assumed responsibility for organization and preparation of the China 2012 AIDS Response Progress Report(hereafter referred to as the Progress Report), as well as mobilization and coordination of participation of various stakeholders. Representatives from relevant government departments, civil society organizations(CSOs)and people living with HIV (PLHIV) actively participated in the report preparation. The Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) 

 

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