Search ( 6824 results )
- article
(Updated on )
Preliminary results of the 1986 survey: Gay men and AIDS
- article
(Updated on )
HIV-related activity at 24 hospital sites in mainland France in 1995–1996
The year 1996 is considered a turning point in the care of people living with HIV. The treatments available to patients changed significantly. The proportion of patients receiving...
- article
(Updated on )
HIV-related mortality in France: trends since the 1980s.
Introduction - This study presents trends in mortality due to HIV infection since 1987 and, for the period 2000–2006, the characteristics of deaths among people living with HIV. Methods...
- article
(Updated on )
Surveillance of HIV/AIDS in France, 2007.
This article presents the status of HIV infection and AIDS in France as of December 31, 2007, based on surveillance systems coordinated by the French Institute for Public Health...
- article
(Updated on )
Cancers among HIV-infected patients in France in 2006: the OncoVIH study.
Introduction - The OncoVIH study aimed to describe the distribution of cancers—one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality—and one-year survival following diagnosis among...
- article
(Updated on )
HIV infection among patients diagnosed with a sexually transmitted infection in the RésIST network between 2000 and 2007 in France.
Introduction - The interaction between HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is complex. STIs facilitate HIV transmission and vice versa. The objective of this article is to...
- article
(Updated on )
Women Who Use Drugs and Practices Associated with the Risk of HIV and Hepatitis Transmission: Complementary Epidemiological and Socio-Anthropological Approaches, Coquelicot Survey 2004–2007, France
Background - In France, women who use drugs are primarily studied in the context of pregnancy and the effects of maternal drug use on the unborn child. Few French studies have focused on...
- article
(Updated on )
Care for vulnerable populations infected with tuberculosis and HIV.
The vulnerability of HIV-infected patients with tuberculosis is not solely due to socioeconomic hardship. Other factors, such as administrative, emotional, psychological, linguistic, or...
- article
(Updated on )
A Review of Occupational HIV Infections: Data from the Literature Through December 1997