Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention Strategic Plan 2011 Through 2015


Book Description

"DHAP's Strategic Plan 2011-2015 (the Plan) is DHAP's blueprint for achieving its vision of a future free of HIV. The Plan reflects the Division's response to new opportunities and imperatives for HIV prevention created by critical shifts in the national, state, and local economic and policy environments, including the July 2010 release of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy for the United States (NHAS). It embodies DHAP's commitment to high-impact prevention using scalable, cost-effective interventions with demonstrated potential to reduce new infections, in the right populations, to yield a major impact on the epidemic."--Http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/strategy/dhap/index.htm.













Strategic Plan Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention


Book Description

The Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention is pleased to present its Strategic Plan 2011-2015. The Plan encompasses all aspect of the Division's work and will serve as a practical guide to inform development of work plans to ensure DHAP activities and resources are aligned with its priorities.







External Midterm Review of the National Strategic Plan on HIV/AIDS and STIs (2010-2015)


Book Description

Mongolia is a country with few reported HIV cases. From 1 January to 30 April 2013, 137 HIV cases were cumulatively reported in the country with a prevalence of less than 0.1% among the general population; it was estimated that 674 persons were living with HIV at that time. The success of keeping HIV prevalence at such a low level has been the result of strong government commitment to the national response to HIV/AIDS with collaboration and support from civil society organizations and development partners including the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund) and United Nations organizations. In 2010, the National Strategic Plan (NSP) on HIV/AIDS and STIs (2010-2015) was developed to define the main strategic directions for the national response to HIV, AIDS and STIs in Mongolia.