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Preventing HIV/AIDS in young people

A systematic review of the evidence from developing countries

Authors: UNAIDS Inter-agency Task Team on Young People
Editors: Ross, David A.; Dick, Bruce; Ferguson, Jane
Number of pages: 348
Publication date: 2006
Languages: English
ISBN: 9241209380
WHO reference number: TRS/938


Preventing HIV/AIDS in young people [pdf 3.41Mb]

The first systematic review [pdf 468kb]

Abstract

Arabic [pdf 104kb] | Chinese [pdf 280kb] | French [pdf 120kb] | Russian [pdf 209kb] | Spanish [pdf 140kb]


Summary

Arabic [pdf 213kb] | Chinese [pdf 280kb] | English [pdf 174kb] | French [pdf 154kb] | Russian [pdf 277kb] | Spanish [pdf 163kb]

Press release

Young people and HIV: the evidence is clear - act now! In six languages

Overview

Young people are particularly vulnerable to HIV: 15–24 year olds account for 50% of new cases. Five to six thousand youths become infected every day, most of them in developing countries. The UN General Assembly Special Session on AIDS in June 2001 set a number of goals to drive efforts to reduce prevalence in this age group.

This report provides evidence-based recommendations for policy-makers, programme managers and researchers to guide efforts towards meeting the UN goals on HIV/AIDS and young people. These goals aim to decrease prevalence and vulnerability; and to increase access to information, skills and services.

This report provides a systematic review of the effectiveness of interventions provided: through schools, health services, mass media, communities, and to young people who are most vulnerable to HIV infection.

The report classifies these interventions into three categories:

  • Steady (don’t implement yet, needs more work and evaluation)
  • Ready (implement widely, but evaluate carefully)
  • Go (implement on a large scale while monitoring coverage and quality).