Zobrazeno 1 - 8
of 8
pro vyhledávání: '"Inang Winarso"'
Autor:
Inang Winarso, Ressa Ria Lestari
Publikováno v:
Jurnal Perempuan. 24:165
Mother and child health as a key indicator of community welfare is measured by the Maternal Mortality Rate (MMR) and Infant Mortality Rate (IMR). But why have efforts to reduce MMR and IMR not yet reached the target? This research answers this questi
Indonesian National Strategy for HIV/AIDS control in prisons: A public health approach for prisoners
Autor:
Laura Nevendorff, Inang Winarso, Faboi Mesquita, Patri Handoyo, Hendra Salim, Ingrid Irawati, Bambang Eka
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Prisoner Health. 2:243-249
There were 89,708 prisoners in Indonesia in April 2006. The majority were charged for narcotics related crimes. Prisons are working at over‐capacity and with miniscule healthcare budgets. There has been an increase of deaths due to AIDS, particular
Autor:
Bambang Eka, Rosi Angela, Ingrid I Atmosukarto, Laura Nevendorff, Patri Handoyo, Inang Winarso, Priscillia Anastasia, Amala Rahmah, Fabio Mesquita
Publikováno v:
Harm Reduction Journal. 4:9
Indonesia has an explosive HIV/AIDS epidemic starting from the beginning of this century, and it is in process to build its response. Reported AIDS cases doubled from 2003 – 2004, and approximately 54% of these cases are in people who inject drugs.
Publikováno v:
Asian Journal of Engineering, Social & Health (AJESH); jul2024, Vol. 3 Issue 7, p1419-1430, 12p
Autor:
Mesquita, Fabio1 famesq@terra.com.br, Winarso, Inang2 iwinarso@ihpcp.or.id, Atmosukarto, Ingrid I.1 iirawati@ihpcp.or.id, Eka, Bambang1 bambang_eka@ihpcp.or.id, Nevendorff, Laura1 milette@cbn.net.id, Rahmah, Amala1 amala.rahmah@cbn.net.id, Handoyo, Patri3 patrihandoyo@cbn.net.id, Anastasia, Priscillia3 p_anastasia@cbn.net.id, Angela, Rosi4 rosy@indo.net.id
Publikováno v:
Harm Reduction Journal. 2007, Vol. 4, p9-6. 6p.
Autor:
Miller, Peter (AUTHOR), Savva, Susan (AUTHOR)
Publikováno v:
Addiction. Oct2006, Vol. 101 Issue 10, p1525-1527. 3p.
Autor:
Julia Pierce
The opening chapter of Living with HIV/AIDS: Challenges, Perspectives and Quality of Life is concerned with exploring the implications of living with invisible conditions in both social and professional networks, and how that may impact their overall