In December, Heartland Alliance International (HAI) participated in force at the International Conference on AIDS and STIs in Africa (ICASA), which took place this year in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire. HAI team members presented an incredible 10 abstracts and 2 oral presentations highlighting our work with key populations in Nigeria and Côte d’Ivoire.
To view the abstracts and oral presentations presented at ICASA, click the links below:
- Improving Access to Legal Services for Key Populations in HIV Programming In Nigeria: A Case Study from the Integrated Most at Risk HIV Prevention Project (IMHIPP)
- Strengthened Organizational Capacity of Key Populations (KPs) Led Community-Based Organizations (CBOs) for Improved HIV Service Delivery
- Improved Linkage of HIV-Positive Key Populations to Anti-Retroviral Therapy by Community-Based Organizations Led by These Communities in Nigeria
- Gender-Based Violence Among Men Who Have Sex with Men, Female Sex Workers and People Who Inject Drugs in Nigeria
- Barriers to Accessing Legal Services for Key Populations: A Community Perspective from the Enhancing Key Population Intervention in Nigeria (EKPIN) Project
- Hitting the “Three 90’s” with Female Sex Workers in a Large-Scale Prevention, Testing and Treatment Program in Nigeria
- Greenhousing: A Potent Strategy to Promoting Access to HIV Prevention and Treatment Services for Key Populations in Abuja, Nigeria
- HIV Prevalence, Knowledge & Behavior Among Female Sex Workers (FSW) in Côte d’Ivoire Results from the 2016 Integrated Bio-Behavioral Survey (IBBS) in Côte d’Ivoire
- Achieving the “Three 90’s” with Men Who Have Sex with Men: Improving Prevention and Access to Care and Treatment Program in Côte d’Ivoire (IMPACT-CI)
- Sexual Orientation, Attraction and Behavior Among Men who Have Sex with Men and Female Sex Workers in Côte d’Ivoire
- HIV Knowledge, Behavior and Prevalence Among MSM: Results from the Integrated Bio-Behavioral Survey, Côte d’Ivoire – 2016
- Confronter la violence et la discrimination à l’égard des hommes ayant des rapports sexuels avec d’autres hommes (HSH) et des travailleuses du sexe féminin (TS) au Mali