tailieunhanh - Achieving sexual and reproductive health and rights for women and girls through the HIV response
Household characteristics such as housing conditions and ownership of consumer durables serve as indirect indicators of a household’s standard of living. Trends in these characteristics reflect a society’s material progress, which has implications both for the economic well being and overall health status of the population. This section examines changes in access to electricity, piped drinking water, toilet facilities, and exposure to the mass media over the last ten years and discusses how Nepalese households compare with households in other South and Southeast Asian countries with respect to these amenities. . | community innovation Achieving sexual and reproductive health and rights for women and girls through the HIV response ATHENA Acknowledgments Luisa Orza Tyler Crone and Lauren Suchman ATHENA Jantine Jacobi and Kreeneshni Govender UNAIDS. Many thanks to all who generously gave their time and knowledge to contribute to the development of this publication and without whose inputs it would have been an impossible task. Moreover thank you to the pioneering women and men girls and boys who are leading innovation in communities around the world toward the achievement of sexual and reproductive health and rights for us all. In particular thank you to Nada Ali Alisa Arzhevskaya Marie Khudzani Banda Amandine Bollinger Alma Castro Ishita Chaudhry Maria de Bruyn Pawan Dhall Dazon Dixon Diallo Zithulele Dlakavu Kelli Dorsey Susana Fried Jennifer Gatsi Mallett Del Rosa Winston-Harris Shannon Hayes Steven Iphani Melanie Judge Sarika Kar Tamil Kendall Naina Khanna Kaleria Lavrova Steve Letsike Carmen Logie Eugenia Lopez Olga Lotosh Jennifer Marshall Lydia Mungherera Angelina Namiba Susan Paxton Dean Peacock Edwina Pereira Rathi Ramanathan Kiren Randhawa and Alice Welbourn. For a list of participating entities and contact details please see the Appendix at the back of this report. Copyright 2011 Joint United Nations Programme on HIV AIDS UNAIDS and The ATHENA Network All rights reserved The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UNAIDS concerning the legal status of any country territory city or area or of its authorities or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. UNAIDS does not warrant that the information published in this publication is complete and correct and shall not be liable for any damages incurred as a result of its use. Author Luisa Orza Editor Kadhim Shubber Design contents Introduction 3 Executive summary 4 1. Breaking the .
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