OHTN

Not Just a Roof Over Your Head: Progress in Housing for People with HIV

*+-Although the Positive Spaces Healthy Places (PSHP) study is over, its effects continue to ripple through the health and housing systems. A new article by the PSHP team — Not Just “A Roof over Your Head”: The Meaning of Healthy Housing for People Living with HIV — has been published in Housing, Theory and Society. […]

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US Releases Clinical Practice Guidelines for PrEP

*+-On May 14, 2014, the US Public Health Service released comprehensive clinical practice guidelines for PrEP or Pre-exposure Prophylaxis, which involves taking of a daily pill to prevent HIV infection. The new U.S. guidelines recommend that PrEP be considered for people who are HIV-negative and at substantial risk for HIV either through sexual transmission or injection drug

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OHTN Research Leadership Series 2016

*+-The Ontario HIV Treatment Network is proud to announce the OHTN Research Leadership Series 2016: For Research with Real Life Impact. There will be three lectures this spring: Dr. LaRon Nelson will speak about the implementation of high-impact, field-based (Hi-Fi) interventions to optimize HIV prevention and treatment outcomes for African, Caribbean and Black communities in Ontario. Dr.

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Protecting Lives, Preventing HIV: PrEP Think Tank Report Released

*+-In March 2016 more than 40 participants from across Canada came together to discuss the research needed to support the most effective possible implementation and use of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) therapies for HIV. The meeting was funded by REACH 2.0 and sponsored by four HIV research funders: CANFAR, CTN, OHTN, and REACH 2.0. The report

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illustration of a blue syringe on an orange background

HIV and STI testing among Indigenous women and women who inject drugs

*+->Download pdf Questions What programs and services have been shown to be effective in increasing HIV and STI testing among Indigenous women and women who inject drugs?  Key take-home messages Rates of HIV and other sexually transmitted and bloodborne infections are high among Indigenous women and women who inject drugs (1-3). For women who use

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