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Elsevier, The Lancet, 9939(384), p. 272-279

DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(13)62230-8

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Transformation of HIV from pandemic to low-endemic levels: a public health approach to combination prevention.

Journal article published in 2014 by Alexandra Jones, Ide Cremin, Georgetown University Law Center Washington DC O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, Fareed Abdullah, John Idoko, Imperial College London London UK School of Public Health, Peter Cherutich, Pretoria South Africa South Africa National Aids Council (SANAC), Nduku Kilonzo, Helen Rees ORCID, Abuja Nigeria National Agency for the Control of Aids, Timothy Hallett, Nairobi Kenya National Aids/Std Control Programme (NASCOP), Kevin O'Reilly, Care and Treatment Nairobi Kenya Liverpool Voluntary Counselling and Testing and other authors.
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Journal Article ; Large declines in HIV incidence have been reported since 2001, and scientific advances in HIV prevention provide strong hope to reduce incidence further. Now is the time to replace the quest for so-called silver bullets with a public health approach to combination prevention that understands that risk is not evenly distributed and that effective interventions can vary by risk profile. Different countries have different microepidemics, with very different levels of transmission and risk groups, changing over time. Therefore, focus should be on high-transmission geographies, people at highest risk for HIV, and the package of interventions that are most likely to have the largest effect in each different microepidemic. Building on the backbone of behaviour change, condom use, and medical male circumcision, as well as expanded use of antiretroviral drugs for infected people and pre-exposure prophylaxis for uninfected people at high risk of infection, it is now possible to consider the prospect of what would be one of the most remarkable achievements in the history of public health: reduction of HIV transmission from a pandemic to low-level endemicity.