Zambian women's attitudes toward mass nevirapine therapy to prevent perinatal transmission of HIV

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Abstract

Use of mass nevirapine therapy - universal provision of the drug without HIV testing - for prevention of perinatal HIV in high prevalence settings with extreme resource constraints is a controversial strategy. A quarter of pregnant Zambian women surveyed would prefer to receive nevirapine through a non-testing mass strategy, and most would support mass therapy as a policy if it would make the drug available to a larger proportion of the at-risk population.

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Sinkala, M., Stout, J. P., Vermund, S. H., Goldenberg, R. L., & Stringer, J. S. A. (2001). Zambian women’s attitudes toward mass nevirapine therapy to prevent perinatal transmission of HIV. Lancet, 358(9293), 1611–1612. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(01)06662-4

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