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Quantitative Evaluation of HIV Prevention Programs.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: The Institution for Social and Policy StudiesPublisher: New Haven : Yale University Press, 2001Copyright date: ©2001Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (346 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780300128222
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Quantitative Evaluation of HIV Prevention ProgramsDDC classification:
  • 362.1/969792
LOC classification:
  • RA643.8.Q36 2002
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Part I: Evaluating HIV Prevention Programs: Context and Concepts -- Chapter 1. Overview of HIV Prevention Programs in Developing Countries -- Chapter 2. Implications of Economic Evaluations for National HIV Prevention Policy Makers -- Chapter 3. Statistical Issues in HIV Prevention -- Chapter 4. Epidemiological Issues in the Evaluation of HIV Prevention Programs -- Part II: Cost-Effectiveness and Resource Allocation -- Chapter 5. Difficult Choices, Urgent Needs: Optimal Investment in HIV Prevention Programs -- Chapter 6. Methadone Treatment as HIV Prevention: Cost-Effectiveness Analysis -- Chapter 7. Costs and Benefits of Imperfect HIV Vaccines: Implications for Vaccine Development and Use -- Part III: Case Studies -- Chapter 8. Harm Reduction in Rome: A Model-Based Evaluation of Its Impact on the HIV-1 Epidemic -- Chapter 9. Evaluating Israel's Ethiopian Blood Ban -- Chapter 10. Feeding Strategies for Children of HIV-Infected Mothers: Modeling the Trade-Off Between HIV Infection and Non-HIV Mortality -- Part IV: New Methods for New Problems -- Chapter 11. Design of HIVTrials for Estimating External Effects -- Chapter 12. Estimation of Vaccine Efficacy for Prophylactic HIV Vaccines -- Chapter 13. Health Policy Modeling: Epidemic Control, HIV Vaccines, and Risky Behavior -- Chapter 14. Development and Validation of a Serologic Testing Algorithm for Recent HIV Seroconversion -- Chapter 15. Issues in Quantitative Evaluation of Epidemiologic Evidence for Temporal Variability of HIV Infectivity -- Index.
Summary: How successful are HIV prevention programs? Which HIV prevention programs are most cost effective? Which programs are worth expanding and which should be abandoned altogether? This book addresses the quantitative evaluation of HIV prevention programs, assessing for the first time several different quantitative methods of evaluation. The authors of the book include behavioral scientists, biologists, economists, epidemiologists, health service researchers, operations researchers, policy makers, and statisticians. They present a wide variety of perspectives on the subject, including an overview of HIV prevention programs in developing countries, economic analyses that address questions of cost effectiveness and resource allocation, case studies such as Israel's ban on Ethiopian blood donors, and descriptions of new methodologies and problems.
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Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Part I: Evaluating HIV Prevention Programs: Context and Concepts -- Chapter 1. Overview of HIV Prevention Programs in Developing Countries -- Chapter 2. Implications of Economic Evaluations for National HIV Prevention Policy Makers -- Chapter 3. Statistical Issues in HIV Prevention -- Chapter 4. Epidemiological Issues in the Evaluation of HIV Prevention Programs -- Part II: Cost-Effectiveness and Resource Allocation -- Chapter 5. Difficult Choices, Urgent Needs: Optimal Investment in HIV Prevention Programs -- Chapter 6. Methadone Treatment as HIV Prevention: Cost-Effectiveness Analysis -- Chapter 7. Costs and Benefits of Imperfect HIV Vaccines: Implications for Vaccine Development and Use -- Part III: Case Studies -- Chapter 8. Harm Reduction in Rome: A Model-Based Evaluation of Its Impact on the HIV-1 Epidemic -- Chapter 9. Evaluating Israel's Ethiopian Blood Ban -- Chapter 10. Feeding Strategies for Children of HIV-Infected Mothers: Modeling the Trade-Off Between HIV Infection and Non-HIV Mortality -- Part IV: New Methods for New Problems -- Chapter 11. Design of HIVTrials for Estimating External Effects -- Chapter 12. Estimation of Vaccine Efficacy for Prophylactic HIV Vaccines -- Chapter 13. Health Policy Modeling: Epidemic Control, HIV Vaccines, and Risky Behavior -- Chapter 14. Development and Validation of a Serologic Testing Algorithm for Recent HIV Seroconversion -- Chapter 15. Issues in Quantitative Evaluation of Epidemiologic Evidence for Temporal Variability of HIV Infectivity -- Index.

How successful are HIV prevention programs? Which HIV prevention programs are most cost effective? Which programs are worth expanding and which should be abandoned altogether? This book addresses the quantitative evaluation of HIV prevention programs, assessing for the first time several different quantitative methods of evaluation. The authors of the book include behavioral scientists, biologists, economists, epidemiologists, health service researchers, operations researchers, policy makers, and statisticians. They present a wide variety of perspectives on the subject, including an overview of HIV prevention programs in developing countries, economic analyses that address questions of cost effectiveness and resource allocation, case studies such as Israel's ban on Ethiopian blood donors, and descriptions of new methodologies and problems.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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