Study demonstrates African women’s long-term use and adherence to ART

A study demonstrated that African women with HIV used ART for years and maintained high adherence, benefiting both themselves and their children.
“This study is based on an earlier clinical trial we completed in 2016 to assess the effect of ART in reducing perinatal transmission of HIV. That study was called PROMISE [and was] the largest perinatal HIV transmission multicountry study conducted in Africa and one non-African country,” Taha E. Taha, MBBD, PhD, MPH, MCM, professor of epidemiology and population, family and reproductive health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of

A study demonstrated that African women with HIV used ART for years and maintained high adherence, benefiting both themselves and their children.
“This study is based on an earlier clinical trial we completed in 2016 to assess the effect of ART in reducing perinatal transmission of HIV. That study was called PROMISE [and was] the largest perinatal HIV transmission multicountry study conducted in Africa and one non-African country,” Taha E. Taha, MBBD, PhD, MPH, MCM, professor of epidemiology and population, family and reproductive health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of