Home > Public events > Events > 2010 > HIV/AIDS in Uganda: how anti-retrovirals change people’s lives

HIV/AIDS in Uganda: how anti-retrovirals change people's lives

LSEAIDS/LSE Health/DFID/ABBA public lecture

Date: Thursday 27 May 2010
Time: 6.30-8pm
Venue:  New Theatre, East Building
Speaker: Dr Antonieta Medina Lara, Barbara Nyanzi-Wakholi
Chair: Professor Tony Barnett

Until only a few years ago, an AIDS diagnosis in Africa was seen as the harbinger of an inevitable and lingering death. In rich countries, anti-retroviral therapy has made AIDS a manageable condition for most infected people. The challenge has been to provide such treatment in resource constrained settings, particularly in Africa. In a unique study combining sophisticated quantitative and qualitative analysis, Antonieta Medina Lara and Barbara Nyanzi-Wakholi examine the way that the roll out of anti-retroviral medications for HIV/AIDS have changed people’s lives in Uganda. In this lecture they report on the detail of their research undertaken as part of the DART (The Development of AntiRetroviral Therapy in Africa) reported in Lancet in December 2009.

Antonieta Medina Lara is a senior research fellow in health economics and the research co-ordinator of the Addressing the Balance of Burden in AIDS, Research Programme Consortium at the University of Liverpool Management School. Barbara Nyanzi-Wakholi works for the Medical Research Council/UVRI Research Unit on AIDS.

This event is free and open to all with no ticket required. Entry is on a first come, first served basis. For more information, email events@lse.ac.uk or call 020 7955 6043.

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