• Women represent more than half of all people living with HIV worldwide. The combination of social and political inequalities, lack of access to sexual and reproductive health and rights, and severe poverty renders women and girls disproportionately vulnerable to the virus. Despite this, there are few programs aimed at curbing the pandemic's spread that accurately reflect the realities of women's lives. Additionally, the same factors that make women vulnerable to HIV put them at risk for other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) including human papillomavirus (HPV), the most common STI in the world and a cause of cervical cancer. 

    Browse our resources on HIV/AIDS and STIs below.

    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Wednesday, 11 December 2002

      Women's eNews, December 11, 2002

      By Françoise Girard

      Editor's Note: The following is a commentary. The opinions expressed are those of the author and not necessarily the views of Women's eNews.

      Many concerned citizens saw President Bush's move blocking the United States' $34 million contribution to the United Nations Population Fund last July as yet another attack on abortion. But his actions then and since have revealed a much broader anti-woman agenda, one that is threatening women's health, human rights and equality in the United States and worldwide.

    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Sunday, 01 December 2002

      December 1, 2002

      By Adrienne Germain

      On a recent trip to India and Bangladesh, I looked into the face of AIDS in Asia, which is increasingly adolescent and female.

    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Sunday, 01 December 2002

      New York Newsday, December 1, 2002

      By Mabel Bianco

      A United Nations report released last week announced that women have caught up with men as far as AIDS is concerned. Half the adults affected with HIV worldwide are now women. This shouldn't come as much of a surprise. It was just a matter of time before the disease shifted from one originally affecting gay white men to one transmitted heterosexually all over the world.

    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Tuesday, 04 June 2002
    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Friday, 10 May 2002

      >>Available in PDF / Available in French and Spanish

      Summary: Factsheet developed by the International Sexual and Reproductive Rights Coalition in preparation for the 2002 United Nations General Assembly Special Session on Children. Includes basic information, key actions, and international commitments related to the HIV/AIDS epidemic's impact on children and adolescents (3 pages).

    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Wednesday, 08 May 2002

      Adenike Esiet, Executive Director, AHI (Nigeria)

      >>Available in Word and PDF

      Introduction
      For Nigeria's over 24 million adolescents aged 10-19, there are several challenges that come with surviving in today's fast-changing world. The traditional norms and behavioral controls that once guided adolescence are breaking down due to several factors that include increasing poverty, rural-urban migration, and the influence of the world media. With the increasing opportunity to acquire formal education, many more young people are spending more years in school and consequently, they are getting married later, especially in the urban areas of Nigeria.

    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Wednesday, 20 June 2001

      The New York Times, June 20, 2001

      Op-Ed

      By Pascoal Mocumbi

      MAPUTO, Mozambique—In the special United Nations session on AIDS next week, there will be much discussion about international aid, about drugs and vaccines. But there is likely to be too little said about what is the primary means by which AIDS is spread in sub-Saharan Africa: risky heterosexual sex.

    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Friday, 01 June 2001
    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Friday, 01 December 2000

      >>Available in PDF

      Summary: By Françoise Girard andWilhelmina Waldman (International Family Planning Perspectives, Vol.26, No. 4, December, 2000, New York: Alan Guttmacher Institute).Examines the international legal framework for the reproductive rightsof refugees and internationally displaced persons, as well as someaspects of UN and NGO policies relevant to refugee reproductive health(7 pages).

      Click here to order this issue or other issues of International Family Planning Perspectives.

    • Written By International Women's Health Coalition
      Saturday, 01 July 2000
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