Living Positively with HIV: Pregnancy and Planning a Family [Lesotho]
The Letlama (Lesotho Together Against HIV and AIDS Partnership) Project aimed to improve the health of the Basotho people by reducing the incidence of HIV infection through the promotion of protective behaviors and support for healthier social norms among young people 15-24 and adults 25-35.
The project supported the Ministry of Health (MOH), public institutions, private sector partners, and an extensive network of community-based organizations to:
- Improve the capacity of Basotho institutions to lead, sustain and harmonize the HIV prevention response and deliver high quality HIV prevention services to scale;
- Empower communities to adopt social and cultural norms, attitudes, and values that reduce vulnerability to HIV; and,
- Improve the ability and motivation of Basotho youth and adults to change their behaviors through increased knowledge, risk perception, skills, and access to services.
This pamphlet is part of the “Living Positively with HIV” campaign and discusses:
- Avoiding pregnancy and STIs
- Dual protection
- Planning a pregnancy
- Minimizing the risk of transmitting HIV to the baby when pregnant
- Reducing the risk of transmitting HIV after birth
- Tips for positive living
Source: Johns Hopkins University Center for Communication Programs
Date of Publication: March 25, 2019
SIMILIAR RESOURCES
Tools
Examples
- Healthy Timing and Spacing of Pregnancy Fact Sheet
- Zika and Pregnancy: Questions and Answers
- Beyond the ABCs of FTPs: A Deep Dive into Emerging Considerations for First Time Parent Programs
- Family Planning Discussion Topics for Voluntary Counseling and Testing
- Consolidated Guideline on Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights of Women Living with HIV
- SBCC for Malaria in Pregnancy: Strategy Development Guidance
- Adolescents Living with HIV (ALHIV) Toolkit
- “Because my Husband and I Have Never Had a Baby Before…” Results and Lessons from Interventions with First-Time Parents in Madagascar, Mozambique, and Nigeria
- Community Communication MNCH e-Manual: Participatory Health Promotion Sessions
- Accelerator Behaviors