
Contents
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24 In the Trenches with Fela: Reassessing Protest Political Music Culture before the Fourth Republic
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Introduction Introduction
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History History
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Current Situational Analysis Current Situational Analysis
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Expenditures and Financing Expenditures and Financing
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Health System Development and Service Delivery Health System Development and Service Delivery
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The Intermediate Indicators of Coverage, Quality and Efficiency are also Very Important The Intermediate Indicators of Coverage, Quality and Efficiency are also Very Important
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Multisectoral Systems Developed and Their Future Utility Multisectoral Systems Developed and Their Future Utility
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Conclusion: the Unfinished Agenda Conclusion: the Unfinished Agenda
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References References
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32 Nigeria’s Response to the HIV Epidemic
Get accessOlusoji Adeyi is Director of the Health, Nutrition, and Population Global Practice at the World Bank Group.
Oluwole Odutolu is Senior Health Specialist in the Africa Region at the World Bank. He contributed and edited the first edition of AIDS in Nigeria: A Nation on a Threshold and The Africa Multi-Country HIV/AIDS Program (MAP) 2000–2006: Results of the World Bank's Response to a Development Crisis.
John Idoko trained in Internal Medicine, Infectious Diseases, and Immunology of infections and has been an HIV physician since 1995. He is currently Professor of Medicine at the University of Jos and an Adjunct professor of Global Health at Northwestern University in Chicago. Professor Idoko was Principal Investigator of the Harvard University/AIDS Prevention Initiative in Nigeria (APIN) and of the Presidential Emergency Program for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) at the Jos University Teaching Hospital in North Central Nigeria. He was formerly Director General of the Nigerian National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA) and currently the President of the Society for AIDS in Africa (SAA).
Phyllis Kanki is Professor of Immunology and Infectious Diseases at Harvard University. She created and directed the AIDS Prevention Initiative in Nigeria (APIN).
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Published:07 November 2018
Cite
Abstract
Nigeria bears one of the largest burdens of HIV infection in the world. Key features of the country’s response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic illustrate the experiences of many low- and middle-income countries. The country’s response is the result of an interplay of policy and political commitment, the work of professionals from multiple disciplines, cross-sectoral programming, and financing from domestic government budgets, household expenditures, and development partners. Sustained progress in Nigeria’s response to HIV/AIDS requires improvements in the effective coverage of services along the spectrum of prevention, treatment, care, and support for those infected. These will also benefit from an effective health system in the context of Universal Health Coverage. Achieving sustainable financing remains a key challenge.
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