A new special issue from WHO on Contraceptive Values and Preferences, published in the July issue of Contraception , examines individuals’ values and preferences across several demographics, including: sexually active women, women with specific medical conditions, men, young people and adolescents, women living with HIV, health care providers and people living in humanitarian contexts or special social conditions.
(...) The variety in preferences in family planning vary across cultures. (...) Research to expand contraception offering and access
The systematic reviews included in the July issue present a qualitative analysis of evidence and answers the call of the WHO Guideline Development Group for research that clearly brings to light the preferences and values people have in contraceptive decisions.
Language:English
Score: 958945.8
-
https://www.who.int/news/item/...on-choice-for-every-individual
Data Source: un
Web annexes
The web annexes include the systematic reviews, literature review, values and preferences, supplementary case studies and technical briefs on HIV and young key populations that informed the development of guidance and recommendations for the Consolidated guidelines on HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations.
(...) Pre-exposure prophylaxis for people who inject drugs: a systematic review (file size: 225 KB)
Annex 3. Values and preferences: consolidated report (file size: 180 KB)
Annex 3.1 Values and Preferences of MSM: the use of antiretroviral therapy as prevention (file size: 220 KB)
Annex 3.2 Values and preferences of people who inject drugs, and views of experts, activists and service providers: HIV prevention, harm reduction and related issues (file size: 257 KB)
Annex 3.3 Values and preferences of transgender people: a qualitative study (file size: 591 KB)
Annex 4.
Language:English
Score: 931515.4
-
https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789241507431
Data Source: un
Web annexes
The web annexes include the systematic reviews, literature review, values and preferences, supplementary case studies and technical briefs on HIV and young key populations that informed the development of guidance and recommendations for the Consolidated guidelines on HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations.
(...) Pre-exposure prophylaxis for people who inject drugs: a systematic review (file size: 225 KB)
Annex 3. Values and preferences: consolidated report (file size: 180 KB)
Annex 3.1 Values and Preferences of MSM: the use of antiretroviral therapy as prevention (file size: 220 KB)
Annex 3.2 Values and preferences of people who inject drugs, and views of experts, activists and service providers: HIV prevention, harm reduction and related issues (file size: 257 KB)
Annex 3.3 Values and preferences of transgender people: a qualitative study (file size: 591 KB)
Annex 4.
Language:English
Score: 931515.4
-
https://www.who.int/publicatio...-detail-redirect/9789241507431
Data Source: un
What women want
How do people feel about women and work?
What do people think in your country?
(...) The data showed that a staggering 70% of women – regardless of their employment status – prefer to work in paid jobs.
How do people feel about women and work?
What do people think in your country?
The power of women’s preference
In countries at all levels of economic development, a woman’s personal preference is the key factor in determining whether she will seek out and engage in paid work.
Language:English
Score: 925839.3
-
https://www.ilo.org/infostorie...ries/Employment/barriers-women
Data Source: un
Microsoft PowerPoint - DCE wb Jan 2009.ppt
Discrete Choice Experiment (DCE):
a methodology for eliciting health workers preferences
Geneva January 3rd 2009
Christophe Lemiere / WB / Washington DC
Discrete Choice Experiment
• The Stated Preference methodologies: a large family (conjoint analysis, contingent valuation…)
• An increasingly popular methodology for eliciting HW preferences regarding rural jobs: Indonesia, Malawi, Ethiopia, Niger…
DCE: a cheap and easy survey instrument
• A sample of HW are asked to choose between «job descriptions » (arranged in about 15 pairs).
• Less than one hour per surveyed person
• A small sample (i.e. 100) is enough
Malawi by Mangham 2007
Why DCE is better than other methodologies for eliciting preferences (1/2) ?
(...) Because we are not good at assessing our preferences. We can rank them (to some extent), along an ordinal scale, but we have difficulties to assign absolute values to our preferences. • Example:
2. (...) Extremely useful for
policymakers (for designing policies type « B » and even «C»), as it measures trade-offs in preferences
2. Given that DCE in HW retention has always been used after an intervention (so far), we are not sure whether DCE stated preferences are good predictors of actual HW choices.
Language:English
Score: 923985.5
-
https://www.who.int/hrh/migrat...hmr_expert_meeting_lemiere.pdf
Data Source: un
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Consolidated guidelines on HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations
Consolidated guidelines on HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations
2016 update
1 July 2016
| Guideline
Download (3.9 MB)
Overview
In this consolidated guidelines document on HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations, WHO brings together all existing guidance relevant to five key populations – men who have sex with men, people who inject drugs, people in prisons and other closed settings, sex workers and transgender people – and updates selected guidance and recommendations.
(...) Annexes
Annex 1: Pre-exposure prophylaxis for men who have sex with men: a systematic review Annex 2: Pre-exposure prophylaxis for people who inject drugs: a systematic review Annex 3: Values and preferences of key populations: consolidated report Annex 3.1: Values & preferences of MSM: the use of antiretroviral therapy as prevention Annex 3.2: Values and preferences of people who inject drugs, and views of experts, activists and service providers: HIV prevention, harm reduction and related issues Annex 3.3: Values and preferences of transgender people: a qualitative study Annex 4: Health Interventions for prisoners Annex 5: On the ground: Programmes serving the needs of key populations Annex 6.1: HIV and young transgender people Annex 6.2 HIV and young people who sell sex Annex 6.3 HIV and young people who inject drugs Annex 6.4 HIV and young men who have sex with men Annex 7 Recommendation on ARV-related prevention: Language from 2014 version of the Consolidated guidelines on HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations
Download pdf, 3.37MB
Related
Tool to set and monitor targets for HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations
WHO Team
Global HIV, Hepatitis and Sexually Transmitted Infections Programmes,
Guidelines Review Committee
Editors
WHO
Number of pages
155
Reference numbers
ISBN: 978 92 4 151112 4
Copyright
WHO 2016 - CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO
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WHO
Language:English
Score: 916564.4
-
https://www.who.int/publicatio...-detail-redirect/9789241511124
Data Source: un
The findings are revealing: A total of 70 per cent of women and a similar 66 per cent of men would prefer that women work at paid jobs. Each of these figures are more than double the percentages of those who would prefer women to stay at home. (...) Women and men with higher levels of education are also more likely to prefer that women both work at paid jobs and provide care.
(...) In addition to polling people’s preferences about women and work, respondents were asked whether it was acceptable for women in their families to have paid jobs.
Language:English
Score: 912482.1
-
https://www.ilo.org/global/abo...WCMS_545963/lang--nl/index.htm
Data Source: un
The findings are revealing: A total of 70 per cent of women and a similar 66 per cent of men would prefer that women work at paid jobs. Each of these figures are more than double the percentages of those who would prefer women to stay at home. (...) Women and men with higher levels of education are also more likely to prefer that women both work at paid jobs and provide care.
(...) In addition to polling people’s preferences about women and work, respondents were asked whether it was acceptable for women in their families to have paid jobs.
Language:English
Score: 912482.1
-
https://www.ilo.org/global/abo...WCMS_545963/lang--de/index.htm
Data Source: un
The findings are revealing: A total of 70 per cent of women and a similar 66 per cent of men would prefer that women work at paid jobs. Each of these figures are more than double the percentages of those who would prefer women to stay at home. (...) Women and men with higher levels of education are also more likely to prefer that women both work at paid jobs and provide care.
(...) In addition to polling people’s preferences about women and work, respondents were asked whether it was acceptable for women in their families to have paid jobs.
Language:English
Score: 912482.1
-
https://www.ilo.org/global/abo...WCMS_545963/lang--en/index.htm
Data Source: un
The findings are revealing: A total of 70 per cent of women and a similar 66 per cent of men would prefer that women work at paid jobs. Each of these figures are more than double the percentages of those who would prefer women to stay at home. (...) Women and men with higher levels of education are also more likely to prefer that women both work at paid jobs and provide care.
(...) In addition to polling people’s preferences about women and work, respondents were asked whether it was acceptable for women in their families to have paid jobs.
Language:English
Score: 912482.1
-
https://www.ilo.org/global/abo...WCMS_545963/lang--tr/index.htm
Data Source: un