Women’s Health Issues Supplement Showcases Gender-Responsive National HIV/AIDS Programming for U.S. Women and Girls
The supplement grew out of a June 2010 forum, Bringing Gender Home: Implementing Gender-Responsive HIV/AIDS Programming for U.S. Women and Girls, hosted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office on Women’s Health in partnership with UNAIDS. In anticipation of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS) release, participants recommended strategies and ideas to make HIV/AIDS prevention and care programs more responsive to the needs of women and girls. The Gender Forum recommendations were aligned with the NHAS goals of reducing new HIV infections, increasing access to care and improving health outcomes for people living with HIV, and reducing HIV-related health disparities.
Since the release of the Gender Forum Recommendations, the Office on Women’s Health, together with invited experts from the field and Federal colleagues, wrote a set of articles for a special supplement of Women’s Health Issues, a peer-reviewed, bimonthly, multidisciplinary journal that publishes research and review manuscripts related to women’s health care and policy. The articles reflect the main themes discussed at the Gender Forum, including: prevention and risk reduction, care and treatment, violence prevention, reproductive and sexual health, human rights, criminal justice issues and population-specific perspectives.
For the supplement, I co-authored a commentary with Dr. Ronald Valdiserri, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health, Infectious Diseases, titled “Achieving the Goals of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy: Keeping Gender in Mind
The Supplement also features commentaries by leaders in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health, the Office of AIDS Research and the Office of Research on Women’s Health of the National Institutes of Health, and the Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and also includes nine peer-reviewed invited articles addressing the unique and diverse needs of women and girls with, or at risk for, HIV infection.
Read more about the Supplement in this press release http://www.jiwh.org/
Free online access to the commentaries and articles is available at: http://www.whijournal.com/supplements
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