Indigenous Community Research Partnerships (ICRP) is an online open education training resource. It is designed to assist researchers who are new to research in partnerships with Inuit, Métis and First Nations communities and support ethical, collaborate, and culturally supportive engagement.
This resource, developed in partnership with the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, explains the important role of privacy and confidentiality in reducing stigma and discrimination related to STBBIs, and offers frontline health and social service providers several strategies they can use to deal with issues related to privacy, confidentiality, the criminalization of HIV non-disclosure and stigma…
This course focuses on the science of U=U and how to effectively spread the message in a clear, stigma-free manner.
This course is delivered online by a CATIE health educator, providing instruction through a combination of interactive e-learning units, readings, videos, and discussion board assignments. The course culminates in an online meeting where participants can learn and discuss implications for their daily work.
This course aims to develop in-depth knowledge on the treatment of hepatitis C for frontline service providers. Participants will gain information on the benefits of treatment and an overview of what treatment for hepatitis C typically includes.
CATIE’s HIV and Hepatitis C Testing course aims to develop in-depth knowledge of testing technologies, approaches to testing, and how all service providers play an important role in reaching people with HIV and hepatitis C. Throughout this course, participants learn about the importance of testing for HIV and hepatitis C, what testing technologies exist in…
This course aims to develop in-depth knowledge of HIV treatment for frontline service providers. Participants learn how HIV treatment works in the body, what being on HIV treatment means, how HIV develops drug resistance and how to support clients with adherence.
This Stigma Training Guide was developed with support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and is implemented in Zambia, Ghana, and Tanzania with the aim of reducing HIV-related stigma and discrimination in health facilities and amongst staff in health facilities.