References

  1. McMurchy D. The economic impact of HIV/AIDS in Lesotho. AIDS Anal Afr. 1997; 7(4): 11-2. PubMed | Google Scholar

  2. UNAIDS. HIV and AIDS Estimates. Lesotho 2016. Accessed November 7 2017.

  3. Carrasco MA, Fleming P, Wagman J, Wong V. Toward 90-90-90: identifying those who have never been tested for HIV and differences by sex in Lesotho. AIDS Care. 2018; 30(3): 284-8. PubMed | Google Scholar

  4. Lesotho Ministry of Health. Global AIDs response progress report 2015: Follow-up to the 2011 political declaration on HIV/AIDs: intensifying efforts to eliminate HIV/AIDs. Accessed November 7 2017.

  5. Development Alternatives Incorporated. Lesotho-Apparel Lesotho Alliance to Fight Aids (ALAFA) Project. 2007. Accessed November 8 2017.

  6. Mthente. ComMark Textile and Apparel Sector Programme Impact Assessment (Final Report). Cape Town. 2009.

  7. Catalyst. A newsletter of the ComMark Trust. September 2005. Accessed November 8 2017.

  8. Plessis MD. Powerful alliance in the fight against Aids. Mail&Guardian. 2009.

  9. Redd AD, Quinn TC, Tobian AA. Frequency and implications of HIV superinfection. The Lancet infectious diseases. 2013; 13(7): 622-8. PubMed | Google Scholar

  10. Redd AD, Mullis CE, Serwadda D, Kong X, Martens C, Ricklefs SM et al. The rates of HIV superinfection and primary HIV incidence in a general population in Rakai, Uganda. The Journal of infectious diseases. 2012; 206(2): 267-74. PubMed | Google Scholar

  11. Smith DM, Wong JK, Hightower GK, Ignacio CC, Koelsch KK, Petropoulos CJ et al. HIV drug resistance acquired through superinfection. AIDS. 2005; 19(12): 1251-6. PubMed | Google Scholar

  12. Ojikutu BO, Pathak S, Srithanaviboonchai K, Limbada M, Friedman R, Li S et al. Community cultural norms, stigma and disclosure to sexual partners among women living with HIV in Thailand, Brazil and Zambia (HPTN 063). PLoS One. 2016; 11(5): e0153600. PubMed | Google Scholar

  13. International Organization for Migration. Briefing Note on HIV and Labour Migration in Lesotho. Pretoria South Africa. 2008.

  14. Kalichman SC. HIV transmission risk behaviors of men and women living with HIV-AIDS: Prevalence, predictors, and emerging clinical interventions. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice. 2000; 7(1): 32-47. Google Scholar

  15. Shukla M, Agarwal M, Singh JV, Tripathi AK, Srivastava AK, Singh VK. High-risk sexual behavior among people living with HIV/AIDS attending tertiary care hospitals in district of Northern India. Indian J Sex Transm Dis. 2016; 37(1): 46. PubMed

  16. Eshete H, Sahlul T. The progression of HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia. The Ethiopian Journal of Health Development (EJHD). 2017; 10(3). Google Scholar

  17. Cherie A, Berhane Y. Peer pressure is the prime driver of risky sexual behaviors among school adolescents in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. World Journal of AIDS. 2012; 2(03): 159-64. Google Scholar

  18. Negeri EL. Assessment of risky sexual behaviors and risk perception among youths in Western Ethiopia: the influences of family and peers: a comparative cross-sectional study. BMC Public Health. 2014; 14(1): 301. PubMed | Google Scholar

  19. Bogart LM, Skinner D, Weinhardt LS, Glasman L, Sitzler C, Toefy Y et al. HIV/AIDS misconceptions may be associated with condom use among black South Africans: an exploratory analysis. African Journal of AIDS Research. 2011; 10(2): 181-7. Google Scholar

  20. Kalichman SC, Simbayi LC. HIV testing attitudes, AIDS stigma, and voluntary HIV counselling and testing in a black township in Cape Town, South Africa. Sex Transm Infect. 2003; 79(6): 442-7. PubMed | Google Scholar

  21. Mahajan AP, Sayles JN, Patel VA, Remien RH, Ortiz D, Szekeres G et al. Stigma in the HIV/AIDS epidemic: a review of the literature and recommendations for the way forward. AIDS (London, England). 2008; 22(Suppl 2): S67. PubMed