Programme for Research and
Capacity Building in Sexual and Reproductive Health and HIV in Developing Countries

 

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(Programme participants at a Communications Training Workshop
held in London in October 2008)


 


* News *

World AIDS Day events at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine


SRH & HIV Bulletin 3
Strengthening Social Science Research Capacity

Factsheet on combatting congenital syphilis
produced in partnership with
Realising Rights

Programme research at
AIDS 2008

XVII International AIDS Conference, Mexico City


PLUS:

The impact of
HSV-2 treatment on HIV

paper by Nagot et al. in the New England Journal of Medicine:
Press Release
and Paper and SRH & HIV Bulletin No. 2

SRH & HIV Bulletin No. 1

Rapid Diagnostic Tests for STIs, a supplement of the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections

XVI International AIDS Conference, Toronto, 2006


HIV/AIDS is among the greatest threats to development in the world today. Sixty million people have been infected in the past 25 years, more than 20 million have died, and 40 million are living with the virus. The poorest countries have been most severely affected, and within them, the poorest people.

Poverty is a major determinant of other reproductive health outcomes in addition to HIV. Studies have shown that the poor have larger families than the rich, that poor women are less likely to give birth attended by trained health staff, and that poor women have lower access to family planning services.

The implications for global poverty of adopting proven, effective, evidence-based programmes for reproductive health and HIV prevention and care are significant. The Consortium is working to strengthen the evidence base and to address the vicious cycle of poverty and reproductive ill-health.

 

 

This DFID Research Programme Consortium (RPC) is a five-year research programme coordinated by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) and funded by the UK Department for International Development
 


The DFID Knowledge Programme on HIV/AIDS & STI, ended in March 2006, but its website is still accessible.

 

Last updated: 27 November 2008 by Tamsin Kelk
[email: Tamsin.Kelk@LSHTM.ac.uk]