2011
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0026117
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HIV/AIDS, Food Supplementation and Livelihood Programs in Uganda: A Way Forward?

Abstract: BackgroundOver the last decade, health, nutrition and policy experts have become increasingly aware of the many ways in which food insecurity and HIV infection negatively impact and reinforce one another. In response, many organizations providing HIV care began supplying food aid to clients in need. Food supplementation, however, was quickly recognized as an unsustainable and incomplete intervention. Many HIV care organizations therefore developed integrated HIV and livelihood programs (IHLPs) to target the ro… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Given the inequitable distribution of human resources for mental health in countries like South Africa (Saxena, Thornicroft, Knapp, & Whiteford, 2007), existing programs and policies should target potentially modifiable risk factors for poor mental health outcomes. For example, nutrition support programs could be integrated into existing antepartum and postpartum care programs, similar to the ways in which HIV care and treatment programs have been explored as potential vehicles for the delivery of food aid to persons with HIV (Cantrell et al, 2008; Mamlin et al, 2009; Rawat, Faust, Maluccio, & Kadiyala, 2014; Yager, Kadiyala, & Weiser, 2011). If such resources cannot be mobilized to directly address primary insults to mental health, then social support interventions, delivered through community-based outreach, could potentially be used to support the resilience of women in withstanding these and other life stressors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the inequitable distribution of human resources for mental health in countries like South Africa (Saxena, Thornicroft, Knapp, & Whiteford, 2007), existing programs and policies should target potentially modifiable risk factors for poor mental health outcomes. For example, nutrition support programs could be integrated into existing antepartum and postpartum care programs, similar to the ways in which HIV care and treatment programs have been explored as potential vehicles for the delivery of food aid to persons with HIV (Cantrell et al, 2008; Mamlin et al, 2009; Rawat, Faust, Maluccio, & Kadiyala, 2014; Yager, Kadiyala, & Weiser, 2011). If such resources cannot be mobilized to directly address primary insults to mental health, then social support interventions, delivered through community-based outreach, could potentially be used to support the resilience of women in withstanding these and other life stressors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In so doing, we can improve their undernutrition and, in turn, improve their HIV treatment outcomes [10]. Such povertyalleviating interventions include conditional cash transfer [25,26], small productivity groups, microfinancing of economic activities, and other livelihood programs [27,28].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They believed that that initiating too many different educational components at once would be difficult for participants. Others suggested that livelihood activities should be started well before food assistance ends to emphasize the temporary nature of food assistance [76].…”
Section: Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%