Uganda Population-Based HIV Impact Assessment 2016-2017
General Info
Original or alternative title
UPHIA
Provider
Coverage type
Country
Time period covered
August, 2016 - March, 2017
Series or system
Data type
Survey:
Cross-sectional - Household - Individual - Interview - Nationally representative - Urban-rural representative
Summary
The Population-based HIV Impact Assessment is a household survey targeted at individuals ages 15 years and above, as well as children ages 0-14 years in 13 PEPFAR (U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief) countries. Data are collected through individual and household interviews, and diagnostic testing for HIV, STI, and Hepatitis B.
Keywords
Adolescents, Age at first sex, Agriculture, Antenatal care, Antiretroviral therapy, Assets, Birth control pills, Blood tests, Breastfeeding, Burns, Childhood sexual violence, Children, Circumcision, Complete birth history, Condoms, Contraceptive implants, Contraceptives, Cooking fuels, Counseling, Domestic violence, Drug consumption, Education, Education access, Electricity, Ethnicity, Family composition, Family size, Female infertility, Food security, HIV and AIDS, Health care access, Health care use, Health literacy, Health promotion, Health status, Hepatitis B, Household air pollution, Household deaths, Household water treatment, Housing materials, Hysterectomy, IUDs, Intentional injuries, Intimate partner violence, Live births, Livestock, Living conditions, Marital status, Menopause, Multiple births, Occupations, PMTCT, Parental survival, Pharmacies, Place of delivery, Postpartum amenorrhea, Pregnancy, Public health facilities, Public social assistance, Refrigeration, Religion, Reproductive and sexual risk factors, Sanitation, School enrollment, Sexual abstinence, Sexual behavior, Sexual sterilization, Sexual violence, Syphilis, Telephones, Traditional birth control, Traditional medicine, Transportation, Tuberculosis, VCT, Water supply, Young adults
Citation
Contributors
Publication year
2021
Suggested citation
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), ICAP, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), Ministry of Health (Uganda), Uganda Bureau of Statistics, Uganda Virus Research Institute, World Health Organization (WHO). Uganda Population-Based HIV Impact Assessment 2016-2017. New York, New York: ICAP, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, 2021.