Background Despite great progress made in methods to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV (MTCT), delivery and uptake of these measures remains a challenge in many countries. Although the Brazilian Ministry of Health aimed to eliminate MTCT by 2015, infection still occured in 15–24% of infants born to HIV-infected mothers. We sought to identify remaining factors that constrain MTCT elimination. Methods We conducted a retrospective, matched case-control study by reviewing hospital charts of infants born to HIV-infected mothers between 1997 and 2014 at three MTCT reference hospitals in the Rio de Janeiro metropolitan area. Cases were defined as HIV-exposed children with two...
BACKGROUND. Ninety percent of the world’s HIV-positive pregnant women live in 22 countries. These 22...
AbstractBackgroundA high-coverage public health prenatal program (70,000 women/year) from central we...
Abstract Background Eliminating mother-to-child trans...
BackgroundDespite great progress made in methods to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV (MTC...
Abstract Background Despite great progress made in methods to prevent mother-to-child transmission o...
Introduction: The prevention strategies for MTCT of HIV proposed by the World Health Organization (W...
Background. With significant reductions in the rate of HIV mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) in So...
SummaryIntroductionWhile the rate of vertically transmitted HIV infection has fallen in most regions...
Background: Although highly effective prevention interventions exist, the epidemic of paediatric HIV...
AbstractObjectivesTo describe the access to the interventions for the prevention of Human Immunodefi...
Although highly effective prevention interventions exist, the epidemic of paediatric HIV continues t...
AbstractIntroductionAntiretroviral therapy and prophylaxis during the antepartum, intrapartum and po...
This study was supported by Brazilian Ministry of Health, PN-DST/AIDS – SVS/Ministério da Saúde/BIRD...
Background: There is great impetus to achieve elimination of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (eM...
Introduction The most common cause for HIV infection in children in developing countries is the ver...
BACKGROUND. Ninety percent of the world’s HIV-positive pregnant women live in 22 countries. These 22...
AbstractBackgroundA high-coverage public health prenatal program (70,000 women/year) from central we...
Abstract Background Eliminating mother-to-child trans...
BackgroundDespite great progress made in methods to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV (MTC...
Abstract Background Despite great progress made in methods to prevent mother-to-child transmission o...
Introduction: The prevention strategies for MTCT of HIV proposed by the World Health Organization (W...
Background. With significant reductions in the rate of HIV mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) in So...
SummaryIntroductionWhile the rate of vertically transmitted HIV infection has fallen in most regions...
Background: Although highly effective prevention interventions exist, the epidemic of paediatric HIV...
AbstractObjectivesTo describe the access to the interventions for the prevention of Human Immunodefi...
Although highly effective prevention interventions exist, the epidemic of paediatric HIV continues t...
AbstractIntroductionAntiretroviral therapy and prophylaxis during the antepartum, intrapartum and po...
This study was supported by Brazilian Ministry of Health, PN-DST/AIDS – SVS/Ministério da Saúde/BIRD...
Background: There is great impetus to achieve elimination of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (eM...
Introduction The most common cause for HIV infection in children in developing countries is the ver...
BACKGROUND. Ninety percent of the world’s HIV-positive pregnant women live in 22 countries. These 22...
AbstractBackgroundA high-coverage public health prenatal program (70,000 women/year) from central we...
Abstract Background Eliminating mother-to-child trans...