Quarterly Progress Report: HIV & AIDS Situation in Indonesia, June 2010. Ministry of Health Indonesia (2010)
![]() |
This is the Quarterly Progress Report for the HIV & AIDS Situation in Indonesia as of June 2010. Publication is in Bahasa. |
Introducing Governance into HIV/AIDS Programmes: People’s Republic of China, Lao PDR and Viet Nam. UNDP (2002)
![]() | Good governance has been recognized by UNDP as a critical element in the reduction of HIV vulnerability. Right from its start, the UNDP South East Asia HIV and Development Programme has emphasized the importance of introducing dimensions of good governance into development strategies aimed at combating HIV/AIDS epidemics. The presentation of this message to a forum of Asian Parliamentarians at the end of 1999 resulted in the publication of the first article of this issue which links HIV prevention and good governance. Download this publication |
Model MSM’s Intervention on HIV/AIDS in Ho Chi Minh City. Binh Thainh Health Center, FHI and USAID (2006)
![]() | The objectives of this presentation are to raise AIDS awareness among MSM, increase safer sexual behaviors among MSM and their sexual partners and increase access to “MSM-friendly” services for STI, VCT and HIV care and treatment. Download this publication |
Counseling and Testing Program Reaches Out to at Risk Populations. U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (2008)
![]() | Vietnam’s HIV/AIDS epidemic is concentrated primarily among injecting drug users, commercial sex workers and men who have sex with men. Outreach workers regularly walk into neighborhoods in Hai Phong City with the hope of reaching these at-risk populations with information about HIV/AIDS and voluntary counseling and testing (VCT). The outreach workers encourage individuals to seek HIV counseling and testing at the Community Health Counseling Center in Hai Phong City. Download this publication |
UN Nepal Information Platform. UN (2008)
![]() | Over the last years the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Nepal has gained ground, and Nepal has progressed from a “low prevalence” country to one with a so-called concentrated epidemic in certain sub-groups of the population (e.g. sex workers, injecting drug users). For Nepal the window of opportunity is closing fast to effectively address the epidemic. Without mounting a vigorous, broad-based response now, AIDS may become the leading cause of death in the age group 15-49 years over the next ten years. Download this publication |
UNICEF Annual Report 2004. UNICEF (2004)
![]() | It was a natural disaster of unprecedented scale that elicited a never-before-seen outpouring of support and concern worldwide. An estimated 300,000 people across Asia and eastern Africa were left dead or missing and hundreds of thousands more displaced after the devastating earthquake and tsunami in the Indian Ocean on 26 December 2004. Children accounted for more than one third of the casualties. Download this publication |
Final Report for the Implementing AIDS Prevention and Care (IMPACT) Project in East Timor. FHI-Impact and USAID (2005)
![]() |
Between 2002 and 2005, the Implementing AIDS Prevention and Care (IMPACT) Project in East Timor helped develop a national response to HIV/AIDS. Managed by FHI, the project produced high quality research on HIV in the country, strengthened the capacity of government and civil society agencies to implement HIV and STI prevention and care services, and assisted the government to develop appropriate polices and systems. Download this publication |
A Joint Response to HIV/AIDS. UNAIDS (2004)
![]() | In the hardest-hit countries, AIDS is dramatically reducing life expectancy and economic potential, increasing the vulnerability of future generations by creating millions of orphans, and diminishing the capacity of public and private sectors. In some parts of Africa, AIDS has significantly exacerbated the already severe problems of food security. Download this publication |
Statement on HIV/AIDS in Pakistan. UN (2002)
![]() | Two decades after the global recognition of HIV/AIDS, the world is witness to the enormous and multiplying consequences of the epidemic. AIDS now kills more people worldwide then any other infectious disease. Most of these deaths occur in young adults, who make up the economic backbone of their countries, and upon whom development depends. Download this publication |
HIV and Infrastructure: ADB Experience. ADB (2007)
![]() | The East-West Corridor (EWC) project was one of the Asian Development Bank's (ADB) first large infrastructure projects in the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS) to address human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vulnerabilities associated with construction work specifically. Download this publication |



