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1.
BMC Public Health ; 24(1): 215, 2024 01 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38238673

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Sexual and gender diverse people face intersecting factors affecting their well-being and livelihood. These include homophobic reactions, stigma or discrimination at the workplace and in healthcare facilities, economic vulnerability, lack of social support, and HIV. This study aimed to examine the association between such factors and symptoms of anxiety and depression among sexual and gender diverse people. METHODS: This study is based on a sample of 108,389 gay, bisexual, queer and questioning men, and transfeminine people from 161 countries collected through a cross-sectional internet survey. We developed a multinomial logistic regression for each group to study the associations of the above factors at different severity scores for anxiety and depression symptoms. RESULTS: Almost a third (30.3%) of the participants reported experiencing moderate to severe symptoms of anxiety and depression. Higher severity scores were found for transfeminine people (39%), and queer or questioning people (34.8%). Severe symptoms of anxiety and depression were strongly correlated with economic hardship for all groups. Compared to those who are HIV-negative, those living with HIV were more likely to report severe symptoms of anxiety and depression, and the highest score was among those who do not know their HIV status. Transfeminine people were the most exposed group, with more than 80% higher risk for those living with HIV suffering from anxiety and depression. Finally, homophobic reactions were strongly associated with anxiety and depression. The relative risk of severe anxiety and depression was 3.47 times higher for transfeminine people facing transphobic reactions than those with no symptoms. Moreover, anxiety and depression correlate with stigma or discrimination in the workplace and healthcare facilities. CONCLUSIONS: The strong association between the severity of anxiety and depression, and socioeconomic inequality and HIV status highlights the need for concrete actions to meet the United Nations' pledge to end inequalities faced by communities and people affected by HIV. Moreover, the association between stigma or discrimination and anxiety and depression among sexual and gender diverse people is alarming. There is a need for bold structural public health interventions, particularly for transfeminine, queer and questioning people who represent three communities under the radar of national HIV programmes.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Male , Humans , Public Health , Cross-Sectional Studies , Depression/epidemiology , Anxiety/epidemiology , HIV Infections/epidemiology
2.
Afr J AIDS Res ; 22(4): 261-268, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38117745

ABSTRACT

As HIV unfolded in the 1980s, HIV and AIDS were heard and seen through the lives of those whom it touched directly. Personal histories were foregrounded, centred by the inevitable mortality attached to HIV infection, the courage of circumstance in the face of illness, and the activism necessary to make a difference. In the later part of the decade, the impacts of HIV were most apparent in East Africa, where community responses and political leadership coalesced to reduce new HIV infections. The 1990s marked a turn towards centralised policy, funding, and the reification of biomedically oriented approaches and systems that are intrinsically top-down. This biomedical turn centred on foregrounding the widespread availability of low-cost antiretroviral therapy and was articulated in the 90-90-90 and subsequent targets. Biomedicalisation reinforces individualised approaches to health primarily focused on biomedical technologies and health service provision that do not rely on community or social organisation formats. Emphasis on HIV treatment, along with the promise of reduced HIV transmission through viral load suppression, contributed to limiting socio-behavioural approaches to HIV prevention. While the importance of community-led response was highlighted in the 2016 United Nations Political Declaration on Ending AIDS, community-led response has devolved towards concepts such as community-led monitoring and community-led response that frame responses in direct relation to the dominant biomedical paradigm. There are lessons in the history of the AIDS response that demonstrate that communities formulate responses to AIDS differently when there have been opportunities for community members to determine the pathways for action to address HIV independently. Older research studies offer retrospective insights into moments in the history of HIV when communities were foregrounded and highlighted the need to reconsider the current trajectory of the HIV response. Not only for history's sake but to acknowledge that community leadership remains overwhelmed by elites. While lofty targets and goals drive the contemporary HIV response, the way forward is mired by uncertainty. HIV prevention efforts remain uneven, and millions of people living with HIV depend on access to treatment for decades to come in the context of budgetary uncertainties. Changing the course of AIDS will not be achieved if we fail to ensure that communities occupy a genuine and unambiguous place in shaping HIV response.


Subject(s)
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome , HIV Infections , Humans , HIV Infections/drug therapy , HIV Infections/epidemiology , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/epidemiology , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/prevention & control , Pandemics/prevention & control , Retrospective Studies , Policy
3.
Afr J AIDS Res ; 21(2): 201-206, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35901299

ABSTRACT

Initial and subsequent waves of COVID-19 in Uganda disrupted the delivery of HIV care. In rural areas, village health teams and organisations on the ground had to develop strategies to ensure that people living with HIV could continue their treatment. It was necessary to take evolving circumstances into account, including dealing with movement restrictions, constrained access to food and stigma due to anonymity being lost as a result of a shift from health facility-based services to community-level support. Uganda has a long history of community-driven response to HIV, although health systems and response programming have become more centralised through government and donors to address political commitments to HIV treatment and other targets. The delivery system for antiretroviral therapy was vulnerable to the impacts of COVID-19 restrictions and related circumstances. To understand the continuum of challenges, and to inform ongoing and future support of treatment for people living with HIV, interviews were conducted with HIV organisation implementers, health workers, village health team members and people living with HIV. It was found that stigma was a central challenge, which led to nuanced adaptations for delivering antiretroviral treatment. There is a need to strengthen support to households of people living with HIV through improving community capacity to manage crises through improving household food gardens and savings, as well as capacity to organise and interact with support systems such as the village health teams. In communities, there is a need to evoke dialogue on stigma and to support community leadership on pressing issues that affect communities as a whole and their vulnerable groups. There are opportunities to reawaken the grassroots civic response systems that were evident in Uganda's early response to HIV yet were lacking in the COVID-19 context.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 Drug Treatment , HIV Infections , Community Health Workers , HIV Infections/drug therapy , HIV Infections/epidemiology , Humans , Social Stigma , Uganda/epidemiology
5.
Afr. j. AIDS res. (Online) ; 21(2): 1-6, 28 Jul 2022.
Article in English | AIM (Africa) | ID: biblio-1391077

ABSTRACT

Initial and subsequent waves of COVID-19 in Uganda disrupted the delivery of HIV care. In rural areas, village health teams and organisations on the ground had to develop strategies to ensure that people living with HIV could continue their treatment. It was necessary to take evolving circumstances into account, including dealing with movement restrictions, constrained access to food and stigma due to anonymity being lost as a result of a shift from health facility-based services to community-level support. Uganda has a long history of community-driven response to HIV, although health systems and response programming have become more centralised through government and donors to address political commitments to HIV treatment and other targets. The delivery system for antiretroviral therapy was vulnerable to the impacts of COVID-19 restrictions and related circumstances. To understand the continuum of challenges, and to inform ongoing and future support of treatment for people living with HIV, interviews were conducted with HIV organisation implementers, health workers, village health team members and people living with HIV. It was found that stigma was a central challenge, which led to nuanced adaptations for delivering antiretroviral treatment. There is a need to strengthen support to households of people living with HIV through improving community capacity to manage crises through improving household food gardens and savings, as well as capacity to organise and interact with support systems such as the village health teams. In communities, there is a need to evoke dialogue on stigma and to support community leadership on pressing issues that affect communities as a whole and their vulnerable groups. There are opportunities to reawaken the grassroots civic response systems that were evident in Uganda's early response to HIV yet were lacking in the COVID-19 context.


Subject(s)
Patient Care Team , Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell , HIV , COVID-19 , Community Health Workers , Community Participation
6.
Afr J AIDS Res ; 19(2): 109-116, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32320333

ABSTRACT

Background: Global HIV response emphasises improving the uptake of HIV testing, providing access to antiretroviral therapy and sustaining viral suppression with a view to curtailing the pandemic by 2030. Stigma and discrimination impede this response by limiting engagement with the HIV continuum among sub-populations such as men who have sex with men (MSM) and female sex workers (FSW). Stigma reduction strategies that explore community-level solutions and barriers to care for these key populations are under-explored. Methods: A formative action research study was conducted in two regions of Ghana to understand community perceptions towards MSM and FSW to identify potential stigma reduction concepts. Multi-day interactive enquiries explored factors underlying stigma including rationale, personal values, perspectives on attitudinal change and related communication. Results: Rationale for stigmatisation of MSM and FSW by participants highlight religious and cultural concerns. Perceived behaviours and practices of MSM and FSW were said to undermine religious, moral and community values. Attitudes of participants towards MSM and FSW became more accepting through critical discussion that revealed contradictions within the stigma construct and discomfort with the effects of stigma. Conclusions: Participants realised that causing hurt or harm to others through stigma was not consistent with their religious and cultural values, nor how they saw themselves as people. There were four entry points that undermined the rationale for stigma: The need to know and understand 'the other', the need to be true to one's moral values, the need for empathy towards others, and recognition of the value of all people within a communal whole. These findings are relevant for engaging communities in stigma-reduction programs and improving health-seeking and adherence to care among key populations in similar African settings.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/prevention & control , HIV Infections/psychology , Social Stigma , Stereotyping , Adult , Communication , Female , Ghana/epidemiology , HIV Infections/epidemiology , Health Services Research , Homosexuality, Male/psychology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Sex Workers/psychology , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology
8.
Article in English | AIM (Africa) | ID: biblio-1256661

ABSTRACT

Background: Global HIV response emphasises improving the uptake of HIV testing, providing access to antiretroviral therapy and sustaining viral suppression with a view to curtailing the pandemic by 2030. Stigma and discrimination impede this response by limiting engagement with the HIV continuum among sub-populations such as men who have sex with men (MSM) and female sex workers (FSW). Stigma reduction strategies that explore community-level solutions and barriers to care for these key populations are under-explored. Methods: A formative action research study was conducted in two regions of Ghana to understand community perceptions towards MSM and FSW to identify potential stigma reduction concepts. Multi-day interactive enquiries explored factors underlying stigma including rationale, personal values, perspectives on attitudinal change and related communication. Results: Rationale for stigmatisation of MSM and FSW by participants highlight religious and cultural concerns. Perceived behaviours and practices of MSM and FSW were said to undermine religious, moral and community values. Attitudes of participants towards MSM and FSW became more accepting through critical discussion that revealed contradictions within the stigma construct and discomfort with the effects of stigma. Conclusions: Participants realised that causing hurt or harm to others through stigma was not consistent with their religious and cultural values, nor how they saw themselves as people. There were four entry points that undermined the rationale for stigma: The need to know and understand 'the other', the need to be true to one's moral values, the need for empathy towards others, and recognition of the value of all people within a communal whole. These findings are relevant for engaging communities in stigma-reduction programs and improving health-seeking and adherence to care among key populations in similar African settings


Subject(s)
Ghana , Homosexuality , Humanism
9.
J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care ; 29(6): 858-865, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30049581

ABSTRACT

Anal dysplasia can lead to anal cancer, which affects persons living with HIV (PLWH) more than people in the general population. Screening for anal dysplasia is recommended to detect anal cancer at an early stage. The aim of our process improvement project was to improve compliance and consistency in implementing anal dysplasia screening for PLWH receiving care at a Ryan White facility covering 18 counties in western North Carolina. There were 291 PLWH screened for anal dysplasia during the 9-month data-gathering period. The compliance rate significantly increased from a preintervention rate of 31.3% to 57.5% (p < .001). There were 109 (37.5%) abnormal screening results. PLWH who had abnormal screening results were more likely to be White. Gender and age were not significantly associated with abnormal screening results. Anal dysplasia screening is a simple procedure to detect precursors to cancer that can be integrated into the primary care of PLWH.


Subject(s)
Anal Canal/pathology , Anus Diseases/diagnosis , Anus Neoplasms/complications , Anus Neoplasms/etiology , Cytodiagnosis/methods , Early Detection of Cancer , HIV Infections/complications , Adult , Anal Canal/virology , Anus Diseases/virology , Anus Neoplasms/diagnosis , Delivery of Health Care, Integrated , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
10.
Malawi Med J ; 30(2): 99-102, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30627337

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Communication to address priority health challenges typically draws on epidemiological research in conjunction with referencing global and country strategies. While community-level perspectives on health challenges typically align with national priorities, nuances and barriers that constrain health response may be less well known. To deepen understanding of the relation between situational aspects of health and ways of making meaning, community insights into health priorities were explored. Methods: Action Media, an established participatory research methodology for informing health communication design and strategy, was undertaken with parents of children under 5 in Balaka District, Malawi. Results: Participants identified malaria as a priority concern in their community. While it was reported that there was strong commitment to consistent use of long lasting insecticide treated nets, there was frustration that malaria incidence remained high. It was observed that risk of exposure to mosquito bites was increased as a result of chores and other activities that extended into the early evenings prior to retiring to bed under a bed net. Bed bug infestations were said to be a common and ongoing concern. Some community members alleviated discomfort by abandoning their beds and sleeping outside without adequate protection while others boiled their bed nets to remove bed bugs. Accessing distant health facilities when ill with malaria was difficult for adults and children. Participants identified the need for effective strategies to address these concerns including accessing mosquito repellant, eradicating bed bugs, treating malaria locally and collaborating in malaria control activities. Conclusions: Meeting targets for malaria prevention requires consideration of contextual factors that undermine effective malaria prevention in affected communities. Such factors are not immediately apparent through epidemiological data. Regularly assessing contextual challenges in high malaria incidence areas provides opportunities to understand gaps, to refine intervention strategies and to inform communication programming.


Subject(s)
Health Priorities , Malaria/prevention & control , Mosquito Control/methods , Public Health , Female , Humans , Malawi/epidemiology , Male
11.
Front Public Health ; 4: 128, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27446894

ABSTRACT

PROBLEM: Developing communication to support health and well-being of vulnerable communities requires a multifaceted understanding of local perspectives of contextual challenges and potentials for change. While participatory research enhances understanding, robust methodologies are necessary to translate emerging concepts into viable communication approaches. Communicators and change agents need to clarify pathways for change, barriers and enablers for change, as well as the role, orientation, and content of communication to support change. While various approaches to participatory action research with vulnerable communities have been developed, there is a dearth of methodologies that address the formulation of communication concepts that can be applied at scale. METHODS: The Action Media methodology has been refined over a period of two decades, being applied to addressing HIV, related aspects such as gender-based violence, as well as broader issues, such as maternal and child health, sanitation, and malaria in Africa, The Caribbean, and Asia. The approach employs a sequence of interactive sessions involving communicator researchers and participants from one or more communities that face social or health challenges. Sessions focus on understanding audiences through their engagement with these challenges and leading to shaping of relevant communication concepts that can be linked to mobilization for change. RESULTS: The Action Media methodology contributes to processes of shared learning linked to addressing social and health challenges. This includes determining priorities, identifying barriers and facilitators for change, understanding processes of mobilizing knowledge in relation to context, determining appropriate communication approaches, and integrating indigenous language and cultural perspectives into communication concepts. Emerging communication strategies include support to systematic action and long-term mobilization. RECOMMENDATIONS: Communication to address public health concerns is typically developed through expert-led didactic approaches that, at best, engage audiences at the end of the development cycle through pretesting of communication concepts. Action Media provides an alternative approach that can be utilized to inform communication by integrating community perspectives at the outset. Notwithstanding the focused engagement with small group representative of health-vulnerable subpopulations, Action Media findings have informed large-scale communication interventions. The approach is directly linked to enabling ownership, critical thinking, and mobilization of knowledge for change.

12.
J Environ Manage ; 174: 87-99, 2016 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26868442

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study was to assess how payments for ecosystem services could assist plantation forestry's integration into pastoral dairy farming in order to improve environmental outcomes and increase business resilience to both price uncertainty and production limits imposed by environmental policies. Stochastic Dominance (SD) criteria and portfolio analysis, accounting for farmers' risk aversion levels, were used to rank different land-use alternatives and landscapes with different levels of plantation forestry integration. The study was focused on a modal 200-ha dairy farm in the Lake Rotorua Catchment of the Central North Island region of New Zealand, where national environmental policies are being implemented to improve water quality and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Nitrogen and carbon payments would help farmers improve early cash flows for forestry, provide financial leverage to undertake afforestation projects and contribute to improved environmental outcomes for the catchment. The SD criteria demonstrated that although dairy farming generates the highest returns, plantation forestry with nitrogen and carbon payments would be a preferred alternative for landowners with relatively low risk aversion levels who consider return volatility and environmental limits within their land-use change criteria. Using the confidence premium concept, environmental payments to encourage plantation forestry into the landscape were shown to be lower when the majority of landowners are risk averse. The certainty equivalence approach helped to identify the optimal dairy-forestry portfolio arrangements for landowners of different levels of risk aversion, intensities of dairy farming (status quo and intensified) and nitrogen prices. At low nitrogen prices, risk neutral farmers would choose to afforest less than half of the farm and operate at the maximum nitrogen allowance, because dairy farming at both intensities provides the highest return among the different land uses available. However, at relatively low risk aversion levels, farmers would operate at levels below the maximum nitrogen allowance by including plantation forestry to a greater extent, compared to risk neutral farmers, due to its more certain returns. At a high nitrogen price of $400/kg, plantation forestry would completely subsume dairying, across risk aversion and intensity levels. These results confirm that plantation forestry as well as being an environmentally sound land-use alternative, also reduces uncertainty for landowners that are exposed to volatile international markets for dairy commodities.


Subject(s)
Conservation of Natural Resources , Dairying/economics , Ecosystem , Forestry/economics , Trees/growth & development , Carbon/economics , Conservation of Natural Resources/economics , Conservation of Natural Resources/methods , Dairying/methods , Environmental Policy/economics , Forestry/methods , New Zealand , Nitrogen/economics , Stochastic Processes
13.
AIDS Care ; 26(11): 1419-25, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24921155

ABSTRACT

HIV disclosure is a gateway to HIV prevention - particularly among couples living in regions severely affected by the HIV epidemic. This cross-sectional study utilizes data collected from 862 people living with HIV across three countries (Ethiopia, Mozambique, and Uganda) in 2011 to determine the role of partner disclosure on self-reported health perceptions and changes in sexual risk behavior. The study's secondary aims are to understand whether or not internalized stigma mediates this relationship and if there is a different pattern of results by gender. The multivariate analysis reveals that the three key HIV-related independent variables, belonging to a support group, doing volunteer work, and disclosing to one's spouse or partner, were significantly associated with lower levels of internalized stigma. Internalized stigma was associated with self-perceptions of poorer health for both women and men, with women reporting higher levels of internalized stigma than men. Disclosure to spouse was positively associated with perceptions of better health for women but not for men. For men, doing HIV-related volunteer work and disclosing their status to their spouse were positively associated with self-reported changes in sexual risk behavior, although stigma was not found to mediate this relationship. Findings from this study suggest that disclosure and stigma have gender-specific effects on individual well-being and changes in sexual risk behaviors. As such, programs must address gender inequity in disclosure patterns and stigma to enhance prevention efforts.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/psychology , Health Status , Sexual Behavior/psychology , Sexual Partners/psychology , Social Stigma , Truth Disclosure , Adult , Cross-Sectional Studies , Ethiopia , Female , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mozambique , Multivariate Analysis , Perception , Risk-Taking , Self Concept , Sex Factors , Sexual Behavior/statistics & numerical data , Spouses , Uganda , Young Adult
14.
ScientificWorldJournal ; 2012: 384608, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23213285

ABSTRACT

In South Africa social and behavioural communication interventions are a critical component of HIV/AIDS prevention, and numerous communication campaigns have been implemented intensively across the country through government initiatives and nongovernmental organisations over the past decade. The aim of this paper is to assess the reach of HIV and AIDS communication campaigns in conjunction with contributions to knowledge, attitudes, and HIV risk behaviours in the general population in South Africa. The sample included in this nationally representative cross-sectional survey was 13234 people aged 15-55 years. Overall, the study found that there was high exposure to 18 different HIV communication programmes (median 6 programmes and 14 programmes more than 30%) across different age groups. Most programmes were more often seen or heard by young people aged between 15 and 24 years. In multivariate analysis, greater exposure to HIV mass communication programmes was associated with greater HIV knowledge, condom use at last sex, having tested for HIV in the past 12 months, and less stigmatizing attitude toward PLWHA.


Subject(s)
Dangerous Behavior , HIV Infections/epidemiology , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Health Promotion/statistics & numerical data , Mass Media/statistics & numerical data , Risk Reduction Behavior , Adolescent , Adult , Disease Outbreaks/prevention & control , Disease Outbreaks/statistics & numerical data , Female , Health Promotion/methods , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prevalence , South Africa/epidemiology , Young Adult
15.
Contraception ; 84(3): 291-8, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21843696

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Male condoms are readily available and affordable in many settings, but risky sexual acts still go unprotected. STUDY DESIGN: This unblinded randomized trial, conducted in Ghana, Kenya and South Africa, was designed to assess the impact of providing a choice of condoms on self-reported use and uptake over 6 months. RESULTS: We enrolled 1,274 men. The mean subject-specific proportion of protected acts with all partners increased from baseline to 6 months by 0.07 in the control group compared to 0.03 in the choice group (p=.025). The observed results were largely consistent across all three countries. In the choice group, men clearly preferred one condom type over the others, and this preference was consistent across all three countries. CONCLUSIONS: Providing one type of male condom in public sector programs appears justified. Programs should not focus on the number of brands available, but should encourage effective promotion and consistent and correct use of available brands.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior , Condoms/standards , Sexual Behavior/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Africa South of the Sahara , Aged , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Self Report , Statistics, Nonparametric , Young Adult
17.
S Afr Med J ; 97(3): 194-9, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17440667

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Currently South Africa does not have national HIV incidence data based on laboratory testing of blood specimens. The 2005 South African national HIV household survey was analysed to generate national incidence estimates stratified by age, sex, race, province and locality type, to compare the HIV incidence and HIV prevalence profiles by sex, and to examine the relationship between HIV prevalence, HIV incidence and associated risk factors. METHOD: The detection of recent infections was performed on confirmed HIV-positive samples, using the BED capture enzyme immunoassay optimised for dried blood spot (DBS) specimens. BED HIV incidence calculations applied adjustment procedures that were recently revised and approved by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for subtype C blood specimens. RESULTS: HIV incidence in the study population aged 2 years and older was 1.4% per year, with 571,000 new HIV infections estimated for 2005. An HIV incidence rate of 2.4% was recorded for the age group 15-49 years. The incidence of HIV among females peaked in the 20-29-year age group at 5.6%, more than six times the incidence found in 20-29-year-old males (0.9%). Among youth aged 15-24 years, females account for 90% of the recent HIV infections. Non-condom use among youth, current pregnancy and widowhood were the socio-behavioural factors associated with the highest HIV incidence rates. CONCLUSIONS: The HIV incidence estimates reflect the underlying transmission dynamics that are currently at work in South Africa. The findings suggest that the current prevention campaigns are not having the desired impact, particularly among young women.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks/statistics & numerical data , HIV Infections/epidemiology , HIV-1 , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Condoms/statistics & numerical data , Female , HIV Antibodies/blood , HIV Infections/diagnosis , HIV Infections/transmission , Health Surveys , Humans , Incidence , Infant , Male , Middle Aged , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/epidemiology , Prevalence , Sex Distribution , South Africa/epidemiology
19.
J Neurosurg ; 96(2 Suppl): 254; author reply 254-5, 2002 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12450291
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