The goal of the HIV and AIDS program is ambitious: to arrest the spread
of the HIV epidemic in developing countries and to enable people to mitigate
or eliminate the impact of HIV on their own health, and on their families,
communities, and societies. To achieve these goals, the Council brings its
wide array of capabilities, including basic research in immunology; the
development and introduction of an effective microbicide; social science and
health-related research to understand better the social, behavioral, and
biomedical aspects of HIV and AIDS; the formulation of evidence-based
policies; and the development, evaluation, and scale-up of effective
service-delivery models.
Specific activities that illustrate the Population Council’s HIV and AIDS
program include:
See Also
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What's New | |
Population Council
senior scientist Marc Goldstein will head a study of a new male
circumcision device for HIV prevention. (more)
"Informed consent in HIV prevention trials: Highlights from an
international workshop" (2008) is available online. (PDF
in English)
(PDF en español)
(PDF en français)
(PDF no português) (PDF
in Swahili) (PDF
in Zulu)
Council associate Scott Geibel organized a May 2008 meeting
co-hosted by the Kenya National AIDS Control Council and the
Population Council to review the status of research and
evidence about HIV and men who have sex with men in Africa.
(offsite
link)
"From bench to bedroom: The Population Council's HIV and
AIDS program," fact sheet (PDFs:
A4 and
letter)
Results of the Phase 3 trial
of the Population Council's
candidate
microbicide,
Carraguard®, have been announced.
(more) |
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