from Challenge TB, TB CARE I, TB CAP and partners
Данный алгоритм предназначен для оказания практической помощи медицинским работникам для клинического ведения пациентов с сочетанной инфекцией ЛУ-ТБ/ВИЧ. (KNCV 2019)
This job aid is to guide health care workers in the management of DR-TB patients with HIV co-infection.
The objective of this guideline is to make available as soon as possible two new WHO recommendations that have emerged from the review process undertaken in 2015. These recommendations address (1) when to start lifelong antiretroviral therapy for people living with HIV and (2) PrEP to prevent people from acquiring HIV.
This guide to M&E has been developed to assist in the management of TB and HIV/AIDS programs that are implementing or planning to implement collaborative TB/HIV activities. It is intended to facilitate the collection of standardized data and help in the interpretation and dissemination of these data for program improvement.
This TB CAP study addresses how communities can be engaged in meaningful and effective ways in TB/HIV collaborative activities. After describing the characteristics, areas of practice, and core competencies of 12 selected community- based organizations (CBOs) engaged in HIV/AIDS prevention, care, and treatment in Nigeria, the study team examined whether and how they are engaged in TB/HIV collaborative activities and how this engagement can be expanded.
Lessons Learned in Scaling Up TB HIV Collaborative Activities in Cambodia, Kenya, and Malawi.
Report documenting the WHO informal expert consultation to promote PPM involvement in implementing collaborative TB/HIV activities through a review of existing evidence and experiences and define core aspects and actions needed for the implementation of such activities by a wider spectrum of providers from the public and private sectors.
These SOPs describe and provide instructions to optimize TB and HIV service delivery in accordance with national guidelines. They guide clinicians in providing TB and HIV clinical care and treatment to people living with both diseases and in evaluating clinical performance, thereby serving as a quality assurance tool for management.
Different models of integrating TB and HIV/AIDS services exist between countries as well as between settings within the same country. For the purpose of this review, the models were categorized into three groups: stand alone, partially integrated, or fully integrated models. This manual describes the opportunities and challenges of each model and highlights best practices and lesson learned from the five countries.
Cette étude a été menée dans cinq pays (Bénin, Cambodge, Kenya, Malawi et Rwanda) et a été centrée sur l’analyse des stratégies, des approches et des démarches qui ont mené à l’intégration des services TB et VIH/Sida au niveau des soins.
This WHO guidance document is meant to provide broad guidance to TB and HIV program managers, employers, employees organizations, occupational health staff and other partners on the need and ways to work in partnership with a whole range of diverse care providers to design and implement workplace TB prevention, treatment and care programs integrated with occupational health and HIV workplace programs where relevant.
The Stop TB Department (STB) of the World Health Organization (WHO), in collaboration with technical partners, embarked upon a revision of the TB recording and reporting (R&R) system to align the forms and registers to the new Stop TB Strategy. The revision facilitates the monitoring of the 6 components and 18 sub-components of the Stop TB Strategy, which itself was developed to help achieve the Millennium Development Goals.
This document is intended for those dealing with tuberculosis and HIV at all levels in HIV-prevalent and resource-constrained settings. It is intended to assist development of national policies to improve the diagnosis and management of smear-negative pulmonary and extra pulmonary tuberculosis. (WHO 2017)
This guide is designed to aid health care workers working in district and regional hospitals in resource-limited settings in preventing, diagnosing and treating TB in HIV-infected children and it aims to address the common management problems. The document is also for managers and staff of national TB and HIV control programmes. (WHO/The Union 2010)
The purpose of this document is to capitalize on the untapped potential of the business sector to respond to these two epidemics. Built on the 2003 guidelines on contribution of workplaces to TB control prepared jointly by the ILO and WHO, these guidelines should help capitalize on increased awareness about TB and HIV and their impact on businesses, and strengthen partnerships between national TB programmes, national HIV programmes, and the business sector to improve TB and HIV prevention, treatment and care activities.