Challenges and successes in linking HIV-infected women to care in the United States.
about
Religiosity, spirituality, and HIV risk behaviors among African American women from four rural counties in the southeastern U.S.Use of Technology for HIV Prevention Among Adolescent and Adult Women in the United StatesUniversal Coverage without Universal Access: Institutional Barriers to Health Care among Women Sex Workers in Vancouver, CanadaA pandemic of the poor: social disadvantage and the U.S. HIV epidemic.General and health-related Internet use among an urban, community-based sample of HIV-positive women: implications for intervention development.Get+Connected: Development and Pilot Testing of an Intervention to Improve Computer and Internet Attitudes and Internet Use Among Women Living With HIV.It's a Process: Reactions to HIV Diagnosis and Engagement in HIV Care among High-Risk Heterosexuals.Improving cervical cancer screening rates in an urban HIV clinic.Perceptions of barriers and facilitators to cervical cancer screening among low-income, HIV-infected women from an integrated HIV clinic.Missed opportunities: refusal to confirm reactive rapid HIV tests in the emergency departmentHigh levels of heterogeneity in the HIV cascade of care across different population subgroups in British Columbia, CanadaDisparities in viral load and CD4 count trends among HIV-infected adults in South Carolina.Considering care-seeking behaviors reveals important differences among HIV-positive women not engaged in care: implications for intervention.Buprenorphine maintenance treatment retention improves nationally recommended preventive primary care screenings when integrated into urban federally qualified health centersHIV Testing Experience and Risk Behavior Among Sexually Active Black Young Adults: A CBPR-Based Study Using Respondent-Driven Sampling in Durham, North CarolinaPredictors of Linkage to Care for Newly Diagnosed HIV-Positive Adults.Prevalence of Drug Resistance and Associated Mutations in a Population of HIV-1(+) Puerto Ricans: 2006-2010.An exploratory study to examine intentions to adopt an evidence-based HIV linkage-to-care intervention among state health department AIDS directors in the United States.Measuring HIV self-management in women living with HIV/AIDS: a psychometric evaluation study of the HIV Self-management ScaleHIV providers' perceptions of and attitudes toward female versus male patientsHigher eHealth Literacy is Associated With HIV Risk Behaviors among HIV-Infected Women Who Use the Internet.The impact of social context on self-management in women living with HIV.Requesting help to understand medical information among people living with HIV and poor health literacy.Barriers and facilitators to testing, treatment entry, and engagement in care by HIV-positive women of colorMixed method approach for determining factors associated with late presentation to HIV/AIDS care in southern India.Accuracy of definitions for linkage to care in persons living with HIV.Perspectives of middle-aged African-American women in the Deep South on antiretroviral therapy adherence.Retention strategies and factors associated with missed visits among low income women at increased risk of HIV acquisition in the US (HPTN 064).Protein and oligonucleotide delivery systems for vaginal microbicides against viral STIs.Integrated HIV care is associated with improved engagement in treatment in an urban methadone clinic.Acceptability and feasibility of a randomized clinical trial of oral naltrexone vs. placebo for women living with HIV infection: Study design challenges and pilot study results.Trends in Nonlipid Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factor Management in the Women's Interagency HIV Study and Association with Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy.Foreign-born status as a predictor of engagement in HIV care in a large US metropolitan health system.Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-Funded Human Immunodeficiency Virus Testing, Positivity, and Service Delivery among Newly Diagnosed Women in 61 Health Department Jurisdictions, United States, 2014.Tuberculosis screening among HIV-infected patients: tuberculin skin test vs. interferon-gamma release assay.Structural community factors and sub-optimal engagement in HIV care among low-income women in the Deep South of the USA.A Comparative Pre-Phase I Study of the Impact of Gel Vehicle Volume on Distal Colon Distribution, User Experience, and Acceptability.Acceptability of community-based adherence clubs among health facility staff in South Africa: a qualitative studyTrends of racial and ethnic disparities in virologic suppression among women in the HIV Outpatient Study, USA, 2010-2015.Health-related quality of life and coping strategies among people living with HIV: the moderating role of gender.
P2860
Q27336081-8AE5035E-F96C-402E-A5A4-A995113EF041Q28082773-07CE9659-F76B-4D11-BB3B-039908F7F95DQ30384514-FF5AEDEA-FC13-4885-9CF2-E1DA4B9BD367Q30430745-19B166A8-7EBF-4118-8871-A84A297E6B17Q33442103-EB6FED2C-0F04-405F-B68E-048209B64B5DQ33566363-445E78FB-CF5E-4A1E-98D0-CB3C81BB39ADQ33653802-38662053-11C3-486F-9DDA-FFAF9C6DE9B2Q33784743-BECB3282-2F94-4B3A-9F9D-70F4858F89E8Q33864570-73419076-0DA4-4A73-9678-E9A9F238392CQ34545039-C464CE2D-3544-4A16-80E0-E5B5D033B417Q34776035-372B3A75-5FE7-4F7D-A9BA-B9A46E0FAF68Q34802519-DCC717DF-13D8-4A9B-BD28-DA19F8EEC141Q34811485-4DA16D2F-CC4A-4AE3-86A3-9541879BB98AQ35112836-ECCF7120-2ADB-4A8D-BD3E-A67C764545EEQ35629370-B189C4A6-BAC5-4D18-B539-B9090778F888Q35934517-B94F67BA-80EC-4CD6-9B95-9051CEADAFC2Q35944787-20BAD787-7ABC-4CEB-805A-2E8120ADE8FAQ35946040-DC782B57-D7BC-4960-8FDE-FBD3F6F1B8C3Q36060678-2EA594A2-2C5E-4541-B4F5-D433CAD5DF83Q36291793-C2C1F9E7-C7A3-422E-9F8F-E5EFE21AF0F2Q36414894-ABF97055-F486-4E11-AD68-D04C1500CB2DQ36850915-9A98C8BD-DCC0-48CC-BB9D-89899ABFF924Q36900012-753A2B35-5F3A-4742-90AF-B64B7A11D31EQ36991361-2C7DE62A-A5DD-4E0E-88CE-C927C66E2CD6Q37145957-5FD05423-0532-4810-A351-D7E708B18D58Q37228560-BAA58FC1-F853-403B-85E2-1E59329F08F0Q37622276-C08DD605-5DF5-4323-9E3D-5D095D31D580Q37701086-98423252-CD2D-42A8-9494-9261759BA8D1Q38260862-867BE889-E71F-4A24-B98F-48A8188C4B55Q38615955-E31BB43C-356D-4A09-A813-4C0D47AE25F6Q38667801-FF0AE0D4-91B5-4644-BD07-2032251D29AAQ39282658-EAF84225-9C8E-4A8A-A97A-60D4F0439B49Q39548551-1EA16D2B-B530-47ED-A533-EE811AFA19ADQ39594116-FA9143BB-8617-4708-A62B-7F844AC640DDQ40208853-7A22365A-EF98-4F6B-8372-1E696E1396C8Q40209011-F090520B-C9DE-4669-882E-2A55AF0B9243Q40460028-BA8A7275-9CCA-47D3-8BC6-26B8A254BDA1Q41996992-10C53975-3BDF-4803-9B01-D4BF6EA6332FQ47223808-2CB9D40C-92BC-44C0-989E-F157955189DDQ47285024-AF68C282-D985-44B3-9328-3AA01FCE2221
P2860
Challenges and successes in linking HIV-infected women to care in the United States.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on January 2011
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
Challenges and successes in linking HIV-infected women to care in the United States.
@en
Challenges and successes in linking HIV-infected women to care in the United States.
@nl
type
label
Challenges and successes in linking HIV-infected women to care in the United States.
@en
Challenges and successes in linking HIV-infected women to care in the United States.
@nl
prefLabel
Challenges and successes in linking HIV-infected women to care in the United States.
@en
Challenges and successes in linking HIV-infected women to care in the United States.
@nl
P2860
P356
P1476
Challenges and successes in linking HIV-infected women to care in the United States.
@en
P2093
Kimberly Y Smith
Mariam Aziz
P2860
P304
P356
10.1093/CID/CIQ047
P407
P478
52 Suppl 2
P577
2011-01-01T00:00:00Z