HIV Prevention Training Package
description
Transcript of HIV Prevention Training Package
Office of Global Health and HIV (OGHH)
Office of Overseas Programming & Training Support (OPATS)
HIV Prevention Training PackageSession 1: Introduction to HIV Prevention
Session Learning Objectives
Participants describe how five different socio-ecological factors contribute to HIV prevention.
The Peace Corps Health Sector SchematicFOCUS IN/TRAIN UP MENU
HIV MITIGATIONMATERNAL,
NEONATAL AND CHILD HEALTH
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
LIFE SKILLS FOR HEALTHY BEHAVIORS
HIV Prevention (Behavioral,
Biomedical, Structural)
Support community capacities to apply life-saving interventions in addressing global health issues
Foster Improved Maternal, Neonatal
and Child Health
Support HIV Prevention and Care
Advance Community Health
Promote Healthy Living
Global Sector Competency
Sector Competencies
HIV Care, Support, and Treatment
Community Care of OVC1
Improved Cookstoves
Maternal and Neonatal Care
Infant and Young Child Health and
Development
WASH: Water, Sanitation,
and Hygiene
Nutrition and NCD2 Mitigation
Alcohol and Substance Use
Prevention
Global Health Sector Training Package
Project Areas
Project Activities/Training Packages
Youth Sexual and Reproductive
Health
Malaria Prevention and Control
KEY to Abbreviations:
1 Orphans and Vulnerable Children
2 Noncommunicable Disease
Note: This schematic represents the sector globally; a focused-in project would not attempt to work in all of these areas. Please refer to the Health Sector Guidance for more information regarding focusing in.
HIV Prevention Terminal Learning Objective Based on assessed HIV prevention needs and risk
factors at the individual and community level, participants will develop a strategy that uses evidence-based combination prevention (behavioral, biomedical, structural) approaches, national prevention priorities, and Peace Corps project frameworks to promote behaviors and services that prevent HIV infection and contribute to a reduction of community HIV incidence rates.
[Country] HIV Prevention Outcomes and Indicators Post adaptation – include outcomes and indicators
from project framework. Suggest the following format:
OUTCOME 1– Indicator 1– Indicator 2
OUTCOME 2– Indicator 1– Indicator 2
Global HIV Prevention Challenges In 2011, 2.5 million people were newly infected
( >7,000 new HIV infections each day). 50% of people living with HIV do not know their status. 40% of HIV-positive pregnant women did not receive
medicine to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission 6.8 million are eligible for treatment but not on treatment. Women are at higher risk for HIV infection. HIV prevalence and incidence among groups like sex
workers, people who inject drugs, and men who have sex with men remain disproportionately high.
(UNAIDS. 2012. World AIDS Day Report Results. Geneva: UNAIDS.)
Achieving the ‘Tipping Point’
amfAR and AVAC. An Action Agenda to End AIDS: Critical Actions to Begin to End the HIV/AIDS Pandemic. International HIV/AIDS Alliance, July 2012. www.endingaids.org
National Prevention Goals
Insert here
Socio-ecological Framework
Socio-ecological Framework - HIV Risk
Project Framework
Insert HIV-related goals/activities from country project framework