Pregnant and postpartum HIV-positive women face a particularly complex set of barriers to prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV (PMTCT) uptake at the policy, health facility, community, and individual levels. They are vulnerable to poor retention in care and adherence to treatment, especially in the first three months after initiation of treatment and the postpartum period. In addition, counseling and support for primary prevention among HIV-negative pregnant women is almost nonexistent in PMTCT programs. This brief describes the IMPROVE study—a multidisciplinary integrated management team intervention to increase maternal and child health and HIV service uptake and retention—that Project SOAR is implementing and evaluating
International audienceBACKGROUND: In resource-limited settings, HIV/AIDS remains a serious threat to...
Background: Although highly effective prevention interventions exist, the epidemic of paediatric HIV...
Introduction The most common cause for HIV infection in children in developing countries is the ver...
The “Integrated Management Team to Improve Maternal-Child Outcomes” (IMPROVE) intervention is a comp...
There is global consensus that transmission of HIV from mother to child can be eliminated. The Globa...
In Malawi, and other resourced-constrained, sub-Saharan African countries with a high HIV burden, se...
Worldwide about 800,000 children a year get HIV infections from their mothers—either during pregnanc...
Abstract Background Despite recent improvements, uptake and retention of mothers and infants in prev...
BackgroundIntegrating antenatal care (ANC) and HIV care may improve uptake and retention in services...
Background: Mother-to-child transmission of HIV continues to be the leading cause of pediatric HIV i...
BACKGROUND: Kenya has made a commitment to virtually eliminate mother to child transmission of HIV...
BackgroundDespite strong evidence for the effectiveness of anti-retroviral therapy for improving the...
The number of new pediatric HIV-1 infections is reducing globally as services for the prevention of ...
Recognizing the need to improve the care and follow up of mothers and infants in the postpartum peri...
This study builds on the USAID-funded prevention of mother-to-child transmission service delivery pr...
International audienceBACKGROUND: In resource-limited settings, HIV/AIDS remains a serious threat to...
Background: Although highly effective prevention interventions exist, the epidemic of paediatric HIV...
Introduction The most common cause for HIV infection in children in developing countries is the ver...
The “Integrated Management Team to Improve Maternal-Child Outcomes” (IMPROVE) intervention is a comp...
There is global consensus that transmission of HIV from mother to child can be eliminated. The Globa...
In Malawi, and other resourced-constrained, sub-Saharan African countries with a high HIV burden, se...
Worldwide about 800,000 children a year get HIV infections from their mothers—either during pregnanc...
Abstract Background Despite recent improvements, uptake and retention of mothers and infants in prev...
BackgroundIntegrating antenatal care (ANC) and HIV care may improve uptake and retention in services...
Background: Mother-to-child transmission of HIV continues to be the leading cause of pediatric HIV i...
BACKGROUND: Kenya has made a commitment to virtually eliminate mother to child transmission of HIV...
BackgroundDespite strong evidence for the effectiveness of anti-retroviral therapy for improving the...
The number of new pediatric HIV-1 infections is reducing globally as services for the prevention of ...
Recognizing the need to improve the care and follow up of mothers and infants in the postpartum peri...
This study builds on the USAID-funded prevention of mother-to-child transmission service delivery pr...
International audienceBACKGROUND: In resource-limited settings, HIV/AIDS remains a serious threat to...
Background: Although highly effective prevention interventions exist, the epidemic of paediatric HIV...
Introduction The most common cause for HIV infection in children in developing countries is the ver...