Strategic guidance on HIV prevention
This document is a result of a collective and comprehensive exercise within the Fund to identify how they can best impact the pandemic as an organization.
This document is a result of a collective and comprehensive exercise within the Fund to identify how they can best impact the pandemic as an organization.
This report summarizes a workshop to launch a pilot project known as the District Initiative to collect school-based HIV/AIDS indicators enabling ministries and planners assess the needs of the districts more effectively.
Document outlines step by step process of how the education system in Zambia will respond effectively to the HIV/AIDS impact. Tables showing inputs, activities, measurable indicators, verification of the work, and assumptions are outlined.
This document sets out provisional policy and strategic priorities identified by MINEDUC in the education sector's fight against HIV and AIDS. The battle against the HIV/AIDS pandemic is not only about limiting its spread.
In 2002, it is estimated that 1.9 million people are living with HIV in Mozambique and that 830,000 of these are young people aged less than 24. In 1999, the government drew up "A Strategic Plan for the Fight against AIDS for 2000-2002".
This document describes the mission, principles, components and objectives of the University of Natal AIDS Plan for 2002-2004.
The Intercountry Workshop on Networking and Partnership between Young People and Governments on HIV/AIDS Prevention for East and South-East Asian Countries was held in Bangkok from 18 to 22 March 2002.
Participants met in Harare to brief each other on the HIV/AIDS initiatives they are implementing in their regions and to discuss ways to increase collaboration and networking between UNESCO, UNESCO Cluster Offices and UNAIDS Inter-Country Team for Eastern and Southern Africa.
The purpose of this workshop was to share information on HIV and AIDS in the formal education sector in Mozambique.
Kelly stresses the importance of responding to the epidemic quickly. The generation hardest hit is today's young. Prevention and education programs must be put in place now to ensure HIV/AIDS is brought into the mainstream and that positive behaviour change is brought about.