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Reversing the Tide: Priorities for HIV/AIDS Prevention in Central Asia (World Bank Working Papers)
 
 
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Reversing the Tide: Priorities for HIV/AIDS Prevention in Central Asia (World Bank Working Papers) [Paperback]

Thomas Novotny (Author), Joana Godinho (Author), Adrian Renton (Author), Viatcheslav Vinogradov (Author), Mary-Jane Rivers (Author)

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Book Description

June 2005 0821362305 978-0821362303
Although the number of reported cases of HIV in Central Asia is still very low, the growth rate of the epidemic (about 500 cases in 2000 to over 12,000 in 2004) is a cause for serious concern. Central Asia lies along the drug routes from Afghanistan to Russia and Western Europe, and it is estimated that it has half a million drug users, of which more than half inject drugs. Without concerted action, we may expect to see the rapid development of an HIV epidemic concentrated among injecting drug users over the next four or five years, followed by the spread among the 15- to 30-year-old population, with sexual transmission as the predominant mode. This would follow the pattern of the epidemic in other regional countries such as Russia, Ukraine, and Moldova. Governments, NGOs, and international partners in the field have taken initial steps to avoid a major HIV/AIDS epidemic in Central Asia. All countries with the exception of Turkmenistan have put in place coherent overarching policies and strategies to control HIV, which were prepared with assistance from UNAIDS; and all countries have received grants from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria (GFATM). NGOs are active in the region, and partner organizations and international NGOs have been providing significant technical and financial assistance. Despite growing regional commitment and resources to prevent and control the epidemic, there are, however, a number of issues that are not being adequately addressed. This study identifies critical gaps, and makes recommendations for further action that will ensure effective early prevention of HIV/AIDS in Central Asia.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The AIDS epidemic has entered its third decade worldwide. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
narcology services, statutory obligation for physicians, carrying opiates, subsequent sexual transmission, narcology centers, international partner organizations, registered drug users, uninhibited spread, overlapping epidemics, regional drivers, risky channel, condom social marketing, second generation surveillance, effective labor supply, harm reduction projects, generalized epidemic, notification rates, sentinel surveillance, trust points, commercial sex work, hepatitis testing, syndromic management, safe blood supply, injecting drug use, registered cases
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Central Asia, Kyrgyz Republic, World Bank, Soros Foundation, Ministry of Health, Global Fund, Tashkent City, Ministries of Health, Drug Control Agencies, Year Source, Republic of Uzbekistan, Highest Oblast, Narcology Dispensaries, Region Source, Human Rights Watch, Soviet Union, Uzbek Health, Western Blot, Western Europe, Board of Trustees, Country Coordination Mechanisms, Current Government, Epidemiological Trends Drug Use, Government of Tajikistan, Key Findings
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