Global AIDS Crisis: A Reference Handbook
By (Author) Richard G. Marlink
By (author) Alison G. Kotin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ABC-CLIO
16th December 2004
United States
General
Non Fiction
Health, illness and addiction: social aspects
614.599392
Hardback
283
From Botswana and sub-Saharan Africa to Thailand, Romania, and Brazil, an exploration of developing countries with limited access to healthcare and scarce resources reveals how such factors as tourism, international travel, war, and mobility have facilitated the insidious spread of HIV and AIDS. Candid discussions of sensitive issues such as stigma and its effects on morale and health complement scientific and medical inquiries into the origins of the disease and the development of antiretroviral therapies. An analysis of groundbreaking solutions such as "medication adherence partners," prevention strategies, and current vaccine models adds a glimmer of hope to a seemingly hopeless crisis.
"A useful resource for students doing research on the worldwide impact of AIDS." - School Library Journal "Rather than focusing on one particular area or nation, this concise volume explores common issues and themes across geographic boundaries... [A]ppropriate and highly recommended for all academic and public libraries." - American Reference Books Annual
Richard G. Marlink, PhD, is senior researcher and executive director of the Harvard AIDS Institute at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, MA. Dr. Marlink has developed HIV/AIDS research and education initiatives in Botswana, Brazil, Puerto Rico, Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania, and Thailand. Alison G Kotin is research publications coordinator at the Harvard AIDS Institute at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, MA.