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The AIDS 2018 pre-conference programme will take place at the RAI Amsterdam Convention Centre on Saturday, 21 July, and Sunday, 22 July.

Pre-conferences are independently organized meetings offering a wide range of population- and issue-specific programming within the field of global health and development.

Important pre-conference information

  • All AIDS 2018 registered delegates can attend pre-conferences.
  • For those who wish to attend only pre-conferences and not the main conference, day passes are available for on-site purchase in the registration area at the RAI from 20 July.
  • Pre-conferences either require sign-up or are walk-in.
  • If you are interested in attending a pre-conference that requires sign-up, please use the links provided above each event description. Please note that confirmation from the event organizer must be received to guarantee entrance to the pre-conference.
  • For walk-in pre-conferences, you are encouraged to arrive at least 15 minutes early to secure a seat.
  • Pre-conference sign-up is managed by the individual pre-conference organizers. Some sign-up systems are being prepared. If you would like to sign up for an event for which the system is not yet open or if you need additional information about an event, please contact the organizer directly via the contact email listed above each event description.
  • Signing up for pre-conferences automatically grants permission for the pre-conference organizers to contact you with future updates.

Please note that this is not the complete list of pre-conferences and details are subject to change. Room allocations will be available in the online conference programme in May.

Pre-conference programme

Saturday, 21 July 2018

Addressing the needs of adolescent girls and young women in the fight against HIV and AIDS

Global HIV Clinical Forum: Integrase inhibitors

HIV Cure Research with the Community workshop

Insight to impact: Driving demand creation for HIV prevention

Intensifying the social in the biomedical era: 4th International Conference on the Social Sciences and Humanities in HIV

Making each dose count: Bringing patient-level transparency to ARV deliveries in sub-Saharan Africa

Sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) pre-conference

Successfully tackling the structural drivers of HIV

TRANS action: Building bridges to safety

Sunday, 22 July 2018

Ensuring efforts to scale up, strengthen and sustain HIV responses

Generation Now: Our Health, Our Rights

C3 Collaborathon: Collaborating to drive extraordinary and sustainable results

Changing the game in adolescent-centred design: Assets, access, adherence

Community activist summit: Reigniting the fight for quality along the continuum of prevention, care and treatment

HIV & substance use research opportunities using the C3PNO virtual repository to link NIDA cohort data

Lessons, successes and challenges: The Global Commission on HIV and the Law in the era of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development

Making it happen! Addressing gaps in the HIV care continuum through implementation science; translating evidence into policy and practice

Nursing pre-conference: Enhancing nursing workforce capacity to achieve HIV epidemic control and positive health outcomes

TB 2018 – Bridging the TB and HIV communities

The performance of point-of-care national rapid test algorithms in multiple Population-based HIV Impact Assessment (PHIA) Project surveys

U=U 2018: Celebrate, activate and implement!

Saturday, 21 July, and Sunday, 22 July 2018

2018 90-90-90 Targets Workshop

STI 2018 – Understanding and addressing the HIV and STI syndemics

 

SATURDAY PRE-CONFERENCES THAT REQUIRE SIGN UP

Intensifying the social in the biomedical era: 4th International Conference on the Social Sciences and Humanities in HIV

Saturday, 21 July 2018

Reflecting the increased need for engaged social science and humanities research in the global HIV response, the focus of the meeting will be on “Intensifying the social in the biomedical era”, including:

  • Innovations and disparities in HIV education, prevention and care from social science and humanities perspectives
  • The social science of combination HIV prevention
  • The social science of implementation and translational research
  • Community-based and participatory HIV social research
  • Theorizing and analysing relations between the social sciences, humanities and biomedicine in HIV and AIDS
  • Models of sustaining social science and humanities research on HIV and AIDS
  • Contemporary social science and humanities research on HIV and AIDS.
Capacity: Approximately 310 participants
Organizer: Association for the Social Sciences and Humanities in HIV Care (ASSHH)
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: contact form

Sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) pre-conference

Saturday, 21 July 2018

Poor sexual and reproductive health and HIV share common root causes, and yet the respective responses to HIV and to SRHR remain largely unaligned and uncoordinated. Now more than ever, there is a need for joint action, but this need remains underappreciated, inadequately resourced and insufficiently leveraged for the greater good.

This pre-conference is aimed at creating a vibrant and inclusive platform on which to foster thematic learning and networking focused on this integration, facilitate global connections, and further unite HIV and SRHR responses to achieve the ambitious targets set within the Sustainable Development Goals, including lessons learned on the impact of the Global Gag Rule.

With the Netherlands, a long-standing champion and supporter of SRHR, as the host country, AIDS 2018 provides the perfect opportunity to help guarantee the health, rights and general well-being of all people, including women and girls, people living with HIV and key populations.

Capacity: Approximately 100 participants
Organizer: International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF)
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: info@ippf.org

TRANS action: Building bridges to safety

Saturday, 21 July 2018

This pre-conference is a partnership between IRGT and global and regional transgender organizations. It will provide a networking platform for transgender activists, researchers, public health officials, multilateral organizations, transgender people living with HIV and global donors to exchange most recent research, best practices and advocacy strategies that advance the goal of universal access to health and safety for trans people.

Sessions will explore various aspects of successful demand creation, including:

The event will feature two plenary sessions, offer skills-building sessions and activities on translating and applying research, violence prevention, programme development, services delivery, working with transgender people, advocacy strategies and sexual health. It will also facilitate affinity and strategizing opportunities among transgender people across regions, age and sero-status.

Capacity: Approximately 280 participants
Organizer: A Global Network of Trans Women and HIV (IRGT)
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: Joanne.keatley@ucsf.edu

Insight to impact: Driving demand creation for HIV prevention

Saturday, 21 July 2018

This pre-conference will create a playbook for successful planning and implementation of HIV prevention demand creation by linking public health science with marketing and communications expertise. We will investigate proven approaches to understand end users and their journeys, and craft messages that motivate behavioural change and achieve intended health outcomes. We aim to inspire excitement, build capacity and activate creative ideas.

Sessions will explore various aspects of successful demand creation, including:

  • Common definitions: What is demand creation, user-centred design, social marketing and other key approaches?
  • Insight generation: What market research is needed and how should it be used?
  • Communications strategy/tactics: How do we create desire for HIV prevention?
  • Media mix: How and where do we need to communicate?
  • Monitoring and iteration: How do we know what is/is not working and rapidly adjust programmes?
  • Demand creation challenge: How do we showcase innovative approaches to HIV prevention demand creation?
Capacity: Approximately 510 participants
Organizer: OPTIONS Consortium
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: aids2018@optionsconsortium.org

Addressing the needs of adolescent girls and young women in the fight against HIV and AIDS

Saturday, 21 July 2018

Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) are at the forefront of the HIV epidemic. Due to a host of interpersonal and social issues, they are among the most vulnerable populations when it comes to contracting HIV and other sexually transmitted infections.

This pre-conference workshop will: explore avenues for addressing the needs of AGYW; take a focused look at the needs of key populations within the broader AGYW population, such as sex workers and orphans; and discuss concerns and needs of this vulnerable population. Pre-conference participants will hear from AGYW experts and have an opportunity to share their questions, concerns and best practices alongside leading organizations working with AGYW through interactive activities and open dialogue.

Capacity: Approximately 90 participants
Organizer: Pact
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: events@pactworld.org

Successfully tackling the structural drivers of HIV

Saturday, 21 July 2018

What works to tackle structural drivers of HIV? How can this evidence inform policy making and programme implementation? This session synthesizes evidence on structural drivers of HIV, including findings from studies conducted as part of the STRIVE research consortium. Policy makers, implementers, civil society advocates and researchers will lead a series of panel discussions on ways to tackle structural drivers that impact on: Sustainable Development Goals to achieve multiple benefits; the delivery of biomedical prevention technologies, including pre-exposure prophylaxis; and the sexual health of adolescent girls and young women. Themes related to HIV risk will include addressing alcohol, gender inequality, social norms, intimate partner violence, stigma and transactional sex.

The panel members will debate evidence on a new co-financing model for multiple-benefit interventions. Delegates will receive evidence briefs, technical summaries and guidance on measuring structural drivers. This session is designed for policy makers, implementers, civil society advocates and researchers.

Capacity: Approximately 260 participants
Organizer: STRIVE Research Consortium
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: strive@lshtm.ac.uk

WALK-IN PRE-CONFERENCES ON SATURDAY

Making each dose count: Bringing patient-level transparency to ARV deliveries in sub-Saharan Africa

Saturday, 21 July 2018

Our diverse panel will discuss the myriad of opportunities for active engagement of the private sector in transforming public healthcare supply chain operations. Discussions will include how technological innovation, serialization and authentication can be leveraged to realize transparency in the delivery of health products to the world’s most vulnerable patients.

Embracing a decade of experience across donor, government and private organizations, our panel will deliberate on the opportunities, barriers and actions required to achieve responsive supply chains – supply chains that demonstrate agility to accomplish the balance between volume and quality while maximizing each dollar needed for scaling up care and treatment programmes.

Capacity: Approximately 310 participants
Organizer: Imperial Health Sciences
Attendance: Walk-in
Contact: aids2018@imperial.co.za

To receive updates, sign up here.

HIV Cure Research with the Community

Saturday, 21 July 2018

An incredible strength of the HIV response is the broad engagement of stakeholders, including people living with HIV and communities, and informed advocacy. As the HIV cure research field develops, it is important to translate the latest research and make sure that it is accessible to the community to leverage a well-informed, multidisciplinary network of stakeholders to advocate for the continued prioritization of HIV cure in the global health agenda.

The IAS is partnering with international and local civil society organizations to organize an interactive one-day research literacy workshop as an AIDS 2018 pre-conference event to provide accessible information on current research directions, emerging collaborations with fields beyond HIV, and challenges for an HIV cure. The workshop will be open to AIDS 2018 delegates interested in learning about the HIV cure field, but aimed in particular at peer educators, advocates, young researchers and researchers from outside the field.

Capacity: Approximately 390 participants
Organizer: International AIDS Society (IAS)
Attendance: Walk-in
Contact: hivcure@iasociety.org

To receive updates, sign up here.

Global HIV Clinical Forum: Integrase inhibitors

Saturday, 21 July 2018

The Global HIV Clinical Forum is specifically developed for global HIV-treating clinicians. Forum participants will receive updates on the latest developments related to integrase inhibitors, will be able to share their clinical experience, and will be encouraged to present the results from their ongoing and completed cohorts/research programmes on integrase inhibitors.

This state-of-the-art scientific programme offers translational plenary lectures, followed by ample time for Q&A and debate, stimulating interaction to bridge the knowledge gap between experts and the HIV-treating community. Delegates can look forward to topics on basic science, resistance, novel therapies, pharmacology, strategies, reduced regimens and special populations, and clinical case presentations to discuss real-life challenges, lively panel discussions and the very well-received “meet the professor” lunch.

Capacity: Approximately 240 participants
Organizer: Virology Education
Attendance: Walk-in
Contact: lena@vironet.com or naima@vironet.com

To receive updates, sign up here.

SUNDAY PRE-CONFERENCES THAT REQUIRE SIGN-UP

Nursing pre-conference: Enhancing nursing workforce capacity to achieve HIV epidemic control and positive health outcomes

Sunday, 22 July 2018

Hosted by the ANAC, global nursing leaders, this pre-conference is intended for nurses, nurse allies, other healthcare workers, policy makers and donors. ANAC will address the divide between frontline health workers, in particular the nursing workforce, and policy makers and donors. All three stakeholders aim for epidemic control, yet do not always work in sync to achieve this goal. Unrecognized barriers to nursing workforce capacity reduce efficiency, stunt innovation and perpetuate missed opportunities.

This session will utilize a nursing perspective to examine the barriers and identify solutions to enhance antiretroviral scale up, effective prevention, and better population and individual health outcomes in both resource-rich and resource-limited settings. Through expert panels and participant involvement, we will identify recommendations and pathways to maximize the impact of nurses and other frontline health workers.

Capacity: Approximately 280 participants
Organizer: Association of Nurses in AIDS Care (ANAC)
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: anac@anacnet.org

U=U 2018: Celebrate, activate and implement!

Sunday, 22 July 2018

The lives of people with HIV will never be the same again. People worldwide are mobilizing to put an end to misinformation about HIV transmission by spreading the news that Undetectable = Untransmittable (U=U). With research confirming that people on effective HIV treatment cannot pass on the virus to sexual partners, U=U has the power to transform HIV prevention and care and to liberate people from stigma and fear.

The U=U pre-conference will bring global partners together for the first time to celebrate this message of freedom and hope. By learning about the latest science, messaging and advocacy campaigns around the globe, participants will gain the tools to put these groundbreaking facts into action in their own communities. Come and join a growing movement of more than 550 partners in 70 countries. Together, we will rewrite the HIV risk narrative and break the barriers that have held back people with HIV for too long.

Capacity: Approximately 310 participants
Organizer: Housing Works
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: UequalsU2018@gmail.com

Community activist summit: Reigniting the fight for quality along the continuum of prevention, care and treatment

Sunday, 22 July 2018

In 2003, more than 120 treatment activists from 67 countries gathered in Cape Town, South Africa, for the first International Treatment Preparedness summit. It was convened at a time when HIV treatment access was very poor, and activists were still grappling with the brunt of the epidemic. Fifteen years later, how far have we come? What is the state of our activism today? And what do we have left to do?

Using innovative tech-powered panel discussions, campfire-style deliberations and interactive Q&A sessions, these are the questions we, as activists, will try to answer. Participants will strategize the approaches and concrete next steps needed to effectively advocate for improvement along the continuum of prevention, care and treatment. The summit is intended for people living with HIV, key population activists, civil society advocates, programme implementers, government officials and all stakeholders interested in and seeking to influence a global, community-led HIV advocacy agenda.

Capacity: Approximately 270 participants
Organizer: International Treatment Preparedness Coalition (ITPC)
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: ttaro@itpcglobal.org

Ensuring efforts to scale up, strengthen and sustain HIV responses

Sunday, 22 July 2018

Initiated by the Joep Lange Institute and hosted by Chairs Kesete Admasu, Mark Dybul and Lillian Mworeko, this session presents a new vision of the HIV response, taking sharper aim at reducing new infections, streamlining service delivery, targeting the use of resources, and building sustainable funding approaches. While HIV treatment scale up has been successful in some countries, many countries are struggling to meet current targets. Even where service delivery coverage is high, programmes struggle to reach key populations, adolescents and young adults. Increased scale up with insufficient funding threatens the quality of care and may cause harm to patients on treatment. Unless programmes improve coverage among these populations, achieving sufficient reductions in infection rates will not be possible to achieve control over the epidemic.

The session reports on a series of meetings recommending innovative approaches for HIV service delivery and investment strategies to maintain and build upon the successes to date.

Capacity: Approximately 1250 participants
Organizer: Joep Lange Institute
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: event@joeplangeinstitute.org

C3 Collaborathon: Collaborating to drive extraordinary and sustainable results

Sunday, 22 July 2018

This interactive day-long workshop will bring together approximately 300 clinics and community groups to learn about the Clinic-CBO Collaboration (C3) methodology and build it into their work planning back home. The workshop will connect the global and the local and discuss how innovative approaches can be taken to fulfilling prevention of mother-to-child transmission and paediatric HIV service delivery and scale up in a shrinking resource pool.

The workshop will be the start of a week-long process that will run through the conference around C3 and will challenge groups to leave Amsterdam focused on those aspects of their collaborations that can lead to improved programme performance. The intention is for participating groups to initiate and develop funding proposals around the C3 methodology to be submitted to PACF for consideration.

Capacity: Approximately 310 participants
Organizer: PATA and ViiV Healthcare
Attendance: Sign-up required (More information available soon)
Contact: Helen@teampata.org

Lessons, successes and challenges: The Global Commission on HIV and the Law in the era of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development

Sunday, 22 July 2018

This pre-conference provides an opportunity for participants to share lessons, successes and challenges at the country, regional and global levels in implementing the recommendations of the Global Commission on HIV and the Law. There will also be an opportunity to discuss the early results of the evaluation of the Global Commission on HIV and the Law and its follow up in 88 counties.

Looking ahead and in the context of the 2030 Agenda and the commitment to leave no-one behind, participants will discuss and debate future directions for the commission and its follow up. The supplementary chapter of the commission’s report will be launched at the pre-conference. Participants will be encouraged to identify actions to further strengthen efforts to end stigma, discrimination and violence in the context of HIV and advance an effective, sustainable human rights-based response to HIV.

Capacity: Approximately 500 participants
Organizer: United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: hivlawcommission@gmail.com

Making it happen!
Addressing gaps in the HIV care continuum through implementation science; translating evidence into policy and practice

Sunday, 22 July 2018

In the field of HIV, implementation science (IS) can help develop and measure evidence-based strategies to improve service delivery across the HIV care continuum (prevention, linkage to and retention in care), as well as overall quality of life. IS identifies barriers to the translation of evidence into policy and practice.

Utilizing a collaborative committee of academic institution experts in IS, health care providers and community representatives, this workshop will be both theoretical and tactical to explore IS research/frameworks, provide opportunities to discuss key learnings thus far, raise awareness of the relevance of IS to HIV, and create a sense of urgency about its importance in the field of HIV. If we are going to achieve the UNAIDS 90-90-90 targets, we need to identify gaps in the HIV care continuum and utilize an IS approach to drive consistency and information sharing, and ultimately improve outcomes for PLHIV.

Capacity: Approximately 270 participants
Organizer: ViiV Healthcare
Attendance: Sign-up required (More information available soon)
Contact: Global.strategicinitiatives@viivhealthcare.com

WALK-IN PRE-CONFERENCES ON SUNDAY

HIV & substance use research opportunities using the C3PNO virtual repository to link NIDA cohort data

Sunday, 22 July 2018

C3PNO is the data-coordinating centre for the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) longitudinal HIV cohorts. We will demo and discuss opportunities related to the new C3PNO virtual repository, which links laboratory, clinical, substance use, behavioural and biological data. Our goal is to stimulate research with outside investigators and encourage new collaborations with international cohorts studying substance use in the context of HIV pathogenesis.

C3PNO fosters cutting-edge science powered by the cohorts’ combined sample size of approximately 12,000 participants. These cohorts span North America and some, like ALIVE and VIDUS, reach back over 25 years. The cohorts include injecting drug users, men who have sex with men, and clinically based populations. We have assembled a team of researchers with global leadership in HIV prevention, clinical science, behavioural science, immunology, modelling and bioethics to promote high-impact science with the NIDA cohort data.

Capacity: Approximately 100 participants
Organizer: Collaborating Consortium of Cohorts Producing NIDA Opportunities (C3PNO)
Attendance: Walk-in
Contact: aeragsdale@mednet.ucla.edu

To receive updates, sign up here.

Changing the game in adolescent-centred design: Assets, access, adherence

Sunday, 22 July 2018

Join Grassroot Soccer, partner organizations and the adolescents they serve to debate approaches to putting youth at the centre of HIV and sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) interventions. This interactive and engaging day of panel discussions and participatory workshops will include evidence from the field, insights from Grassroot Soccer young adult mentor “coaches”, its innovative soccer-based approach to adolescent health, and perspectives from its network of partners. Together, they will look at the most successful approaches to build adolescents’ ASSETS in HIV and SRHR knowledge and the confidence to use it, ACCESS to quality health services, and ADHERENCE to treatment and healthy behaviours.

Participants will come up with innovative and fun solutions to put adolescents at the centre of creating these approaches. Attendees will leave with practical skills and resources to implement adolescent-centred design into their own organizations and communities.

Capacity: Approximately 90 participants
Organizer: Grassroot Soccer
Attendance: Walk-in
Contact: iac@grassrootsoccer.org

To receive updates, sign up here.

The performance of point-of-care national rapid test algorithms in multiple Population-based HIV Impact Assessment (PHIA) Project surveys

Sunday, 22 July 2018

The PHIA Project measures the reach and impact of HIV programmes through national surveys in 14 countries. Each population-based HIV impact assessments survey offers household-based HIV counselling and testing conducted by survey staff, with return of results. The surveys ask questions about access to preventive care and treatment services for adults and children. The results measure national and regional progress toward UNAIDS’ 90-90-90 goals, and guide policy and funding priorities. This project is funded by PEPFAR and led by ICAP at Columbia University in partnership with the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the ministry of health in each country.

This session will review and compare data from the PHIA surveys about the performance characteristics of national HIV rapid test algorithms across diverse contexts in Africa. ICAP will facilitate discussion with key stakeholders on lessons learned, how to address key gaps, and implications for HIV testing programmes.

Capacity: Approximately 270 participants
Organizer: ICAP Columbia University
Attendance: Walk-in
Contact: phiaAIDS2018@gmail.com

To receive updates, sign up here.

TB 2018 – Bridging the TB and HIV communities

Sunday, 22 July 2018

Similar to HIV, tuberculosis (TB) often affects the most vulnerable populations. TB/HIV co-infection is a major obstacle in the response to HIV, with HIV causing a more than 20-fold increase in the risk of latent TB reactivation, and TB accelerating the decline of immune function among people living with HIV. With at least one-third of people living with HIV co-infected with latent TB, the ramifications of TB/HIV co-infection are staggering.

TB 2018 will be an opportunity to highlight the key scientific challenges related to TB and TB/HIV research on prevention, diagnosis and treatment to set the stage for the UN General Assembly high-level meeting on TB. With the theme, Bridging the TB and HIV communities, TB 2018 will focus on cutting-edge research gaps to address concrete service delivery issues, translating science into practice.

Capacity: Approximately 390 participants
Organizer: International AIDS Society (IAS)Stop TB Partnership and USAID
Attendance: Walk-in
Contact: info@tb2018.org

To receive updates, sign up here.

Generation Now: Our Health, Our Rights

Sunday, 22 July 2018

Women Deliver and the IAS are embarking on a groundbreaking new partnership to unite two of the world’s largest movements towards a common goal: ensuring fulfilment of health and rights for adolescent girls and young women. This pre-conference will focus on how to integrate national and global efforts to end the HIV epidemic and achieve sexual and reproductive health (SRH) and rights. Ensuring universal access to SRH services, achieving gender equality and empowering adolescent girls and young women to exercise their sexual and reproductive rights are critical for an effective HIV response.

Generation Now will host a series of pre-conference meetings to unite advocates, scientists and policy makers under a common agenda for women and girls at the AIDS 2018 and the Women Deliver 2019 Conference.

Capacity: Approximately 700 participants
Organizer: Women Deliver and the International AIDS Society (IAS)
Attendance: Walk-in
Contact: generation.now@iasociety.org

To receive updates, sign up here.

2-DAY PRE-CONFERENCES THAT REQUIRE SIGN-UP

2018 90-90-90 Targets Workshop

Saturday, 21 July, and Sunday, 22 July 2018

According to UNAIDS, there has been substantial global progress made since 2014 in attaining the 90-90-90 targets. More than two-thirds of all people living with HIV (PLHIV) globally knew their HIV status at the end of 2016. Of these, 77% were accessing ART, and 82% of PLHIV on ART had suppressed viral loads. Building on the success of the 2017 90-90-90 Targets Workshop, the 2018 workshop will feature a ministerial and high-level panel discussion aimed at reviewing global and national progress towards and challenges to attainment of the 90-90-90 targets. The workshop will also include presentations about game-changing innovations.

Additionally, the workshop will include plenary sessions and panel discussions focused on: connecting the dots between 90-90-90 and HIV epidemic control; reinforcing the critical engagement of affected communities; lifecycle and population-specific challenges; the evolving antiretroviral landscape; leveraging HIV platforms for other health-related Sustainable Development Goals; and financing the global AIDS response.

Capacity: Approximately 1,100 participants
Organizer: International Association of Providers of AIDS Care (IAPAC)
Attendance: Sign-up required
Contact: jhess@iapac.org

2-DAY WALK-IN PRE-CONFERENCES

STI 2018 – Understanding and addressing the HIV and STI syndemics

Saturday, 21 July, and Sunday, 22 July 2018

HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) have been inextricably linked since the start of the HIV epidemic. A new era of global health and development driven by the Sustainable Development Goals offers a fresh opportunity to address critical STI health issues through greater involvement, interaction and coordination between the HIV and STI fields. AIDS 2018, with its focus on HIV within the broader global health context, offers an excellent opportunity to explore the state of knowledge, best practices and a research agenda regarding HIV and STIs.

In the era of universal treatment and pre-exposure prophylaxis, STI 2018 will identify new challenges, emerging issues and opportunities for research and programme implementation to counter increases in bacterial STIs being observed in many settings. The conference will also explore critical issues related to antimicrobial resistance and reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health to ensure an integrated approach.

Capacity: Approximately 500 participants
Organizer: International AIDS Society (IAS)AidsfondsGGD Amsterdam and RIVM
Attendance: Walk-in
Contact: sti2018@iasociety.org

To receive updates, sign up here.

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