As we grow up, vol. 1: What is happening to me?
Viet Nam is facing high rated of adolescent pregnancy, adolescent births, abortion and alarming, increasing risks of HIV transmission posing a growing challenge to community health.
Viet Nam is facing high rated of adolescent pregnancy, adolescent births, abortion and alarming, increasing risks of HIV transmission posing a growing challenge to community health.
Viet Nam is facing high rated of adolescent pregnancy, adolescent births, abortion and alarming, increasing risks of HIV transmission posing a growing challenge to community health.
Viet Nam is facing high rated of adolescent pregnancy, adolescent births, abortion and alarming, increasing risks of HIV transmission posing a growing challenge to community health.
This booklet is the eighth in a series of publications that address key themes of UNESCO’s work in HIV and Health Education. It marks the first of several contributions to school-based health promotion that UNESCO will produce to complement our work in HIV and sexuality education.
This booklet provides statements on specific topics to facilitate discussion among stakeholders in Asia and the Pacific on issues affecting key populations vulnerable to HIV infection. These are: 1. Injecting drug users; 2. Sex workers and their clients; 3. Men who have sex with men; 4.
It’s All One Curriculum: Guidelines and Activities for a Unified Approach to Sexuality, Gender, HIV, and Human Rights Education provides a rationale, content, and sample activities for placing gender and rights at the centre of sexuality education curricula.
The Guidance for the Implementation of the Standards for Sexuality Education in Europe outlines the process for developing a national school-based sexuality education programme and provides step-by-step guidance on how to introduce new or improve existing sexuality education programmes.
This document complements the recommendations to establish and sustain health promotion in schools set out in the Guidelines to Promote Health in Schools document.
A considerable body of evidence has emerged in the last twenty years to inform governments, schools, non-government organisations (NGO’s), teachers, parents and students about effective school health programmes.