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Health Research - Investing in Canada's Future 2004-2005

HIV/AIDS

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The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) is the Government of Canada's agency for health research. Through CIHR, the Government of Canada has invested approximately $28.2 million in 2004-05 in research on HIV/AIDS across Canada.

The facts


Research finding solutions to HIV/AIDS


In the pipeline... Involving communities in research

Community involvement has been a hallmark of health research and action on HIV/AIDS from the beginning, creating a model for communities taking action on other diseases and conditions. Through the Community-Based Research (CBR) Program, CIHR is supporting research that engages communities in taking control of health promotion and practices to reduce the risk of HIV/AIDS infection in all settings. The program, which was initially administered by Health Canada but moved to CIHR in April 2004, provides funding for projects in Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities that promote greater involvement of communities in all aspects of research - from determining the research question to conducting the research and disseminating the results.

The CBR Program's first Request for Applications (RFA), issued in November 2000, resulted in 21 projects receiving funding, including: a study of the impact of housing support and homelessness on the health outcomes of people with HIV/AIDS in Ontario; cultural competence for health care providers providing care to Aboriginal people with HIV/AIDS; and HIV prevention and care among women sex workers in Vancouver. The results of these projects will improve communities' abilities to prevent and treat HIV/AIDS among their populations.

The researchers...

Dr. Liviana Calzavara: Changing behaviours regarding HIV

Dr. Liviana Calzavara's experiences in Canada as a child immigrant from Italy gave her a lifelong interest in peoples' experiences of stigma.

Today, as a highly respected sociologist and Associate Professor at the University of Toronto, Dr. Calzavara has concentrated her research on the social determinants of HIV among vulnerable populations, including homosexuals, injection drug users, prisoners and immigrants.

She has found that the negative beliefs people have about HIV mean that these groups suffer from stigma.

"People look at those who suffer from HIV as being immoral," she says, "because they're perceived as engaging in immoral behaviours."

From 2001 to 2005, Dr. Calzavara was the lead investigator of the groundbreaking, CIHR-funded Polaris HIV Seroconversion study, which supplied a wealth of information to help target HIV prevention efforts. Dr. Calzavara discovered that delaying the application of condoms for anal sex made gay and bisexual men six times more likely to contract HIV. The study also found that people at risk of contracting HIV who repeatedly tested negative developed a misperception that their current highrisk behaviour was safe.

The Polaris study built on her earlier work, carried out throughout the 1990s, which helped to measure the incidence of HIV among people who underwent repeat testing in Ontario. Her finding of increased HIV infection rates among men having sex with men received significant media coverage and generated community-based prevention efforts, including an information campaign called 'Welcome to Condom Country'. As a result, infection rates stabilized in 2000.

Now Dr. Calzavara is extending her research internationally to help transitioning countries that don't have the research capacity in place to deal with HIV. As a member of the Canada AIDS Russia Project (CARP), developed in conjunction with the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), she is adapting the Polaris study to a Russian context in order to trace the growth of HIV in that country. Applying the Polaris model revealed 30,124 new infections in Russia in 2003 - information that is a vital prerequisite for effective prevention and treatment.The CIHR Institute

The CIHR Institute of Infection and Immunity takes the lead for CIHR in the fight against HIV/AIDS. CIHR administers the research arm of the Federal Initiative to Address HIV/AIDS in Canada. The Institute, under the leadership of Scientific Director Dr. Bhagirath Singh, is identifying research priorities and undertaking collaborative research initiatives to reduce the burden of HIV/AIDS domestically and internationally. The Institute has created the CIHR HIV/AIDS Research Advisory Committee to assist CIHR in determining research priorities and ensuring that research is relevant and meets identified needs. The committee members represent five CIHR Institutes, the Public Health Agency of Canada, the Ministerial Council on HIV/AIDS, and the HIV/AIDS research and volunteer communities.

Much of CIHR's support for HIV/AIDS research is funneled through the Canadian HIV Trials Network (CTN), a partnership of researchers, practitioners, the private sector and people living with HIV/AIDS, that facilitates clinical trials of the highest scientific and ethical standards. As of April 2005, the CTN had reviewed 208 trial protocols, implemented 89 clinical trials involving 8,448 volunteers at sites across Canada and enrolled another 11,000 Canadians in expanded (compassionate) access trials.

About the Canadian Institutes of Health Research

The Canadian Institutes of Health Research is the Government of Canada's agency for health research. Its objective is to excel, according to internationally accepted standards of scientific excellence, in the creation of new knowledge and its translation into improved health for Canadians, more effective health services and products and a strengthened Canadian health care system. Composed of 13 Institutes, CIHR provides leadership and support to close to 10,000 researchers and trainees in every province of Canada.


Created: 2005-09-01
Modified: 2006-11-23
Reviewed: 2005-09-01
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