Population Council Research that makes a difference

Banner Photo: Young men standing outside a vehicle in Lesotho

Overview

Past Council work in Lesotho focused on preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV through postpartum family planning. Currently, the Population Council is a member of a multi-country consortium that seeks to improve HIV and AIDS policymaking and implementation in sub-Saharan Africa.

Highlights of past and present work

  • The Council is a member of the Addressing the Balance of Burden in AIDS Research Programme Consortium (ABBA RPC), a multi-country research project in sub-Saharan Africa that explores the social context around prevention, treatment, care, and mitigation of the effects of HIV and AIDS in vulnerable populations.
  • Developed a postpartum family planning package to increase HIV testing and use of the lactational amenorrhea method (LAM) for family planning.

Projects

Addressing the Balance of Burden in AIDS (ABBA) (more)
The Population Council is working within the ABBA Research Programme Consortium on an intervention targeting adolescents in secondary schools in peri-urban communities in the Durban metro area of South Africa.
(6/2006 - ongoing)
HIV care, support, and treatment; Vulnerable populations

Extending Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission (PMTCT) of HIV Through Postpartum Family Planning (more)
In Lesotho, Council researchers tested the feasibility and effect of a strengthened postpartum care program.
(5/2006 - 5/2008)
PMTCT and pediatric HIV; Safe pregnancy/antenatal and delivery care

Resources

The adolescent experience in-depth: Using data to identify and reach the most vulnerable young people--Lesotho 2004 (PDF) (HTML
Publication date: 2009


Extending prevention of mother-to-child transmission through postpartum family planning in Lesotho (PDF
Warren,Charlotte; Phafoli,Semakaleng; Majara,Bosielo; Tsukuluet,Thato
FRONTIERS Final Report
Publication date: 2008


Lesotho Fast Facts

Population (millions)2.1
Total fertility rate3.4
Infant deaths per 1,000 live births83
Maternal deaths per 100,000 live births960
Girls aged 20-24 married by age 18 (%)23
HIV/AIDS prevalence (%)23.2
Living below US $2 per day (%)62

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