WHO Elimination Standards
Cross-source consensus on WHO Elimination Standards from 1 sources and 79 claims.
1 sources · 79 claims
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Highlighted claims
- The WHO defines elimination of a disease as sustained achievement of specific epidemiological targets, not the complete absence of new cases. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems
- The WHO defines elimination of a disease not as zero incidence but as sustained achievement of specific epidemiological and programmatic targets. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems
- Under the WHO framework, elimination represents a control threshold that permits continued but minimal transmission. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems
- The WHO MTCT elimination criteria include 95% or higher coverage for antenatal care, HIV testing during pregnancy, and antiretroviral treatment for pregnant women with HIV. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems
- WHO requires HIV testing coverage during pregnancy of at least 95% for elimination validation. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems
- WHO requires antiretroviral treatment coverage of at least 95% among pregnant women with HIV for elimination validation. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems
- WHO's definition of elimination requires achieving specific sustained epidemiological and programmatic targets, not the complete absence of new cases. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems
- WHO elimination represents a control threshold that allows for continued but minimal transmission, not zero incidence. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems
- WHO defines elimination as a control threshold based on sustained programmatic targets, not the complete absence of new cases. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems
- Elimination allows for continued but minimal transmission rather than requiring zero incidence. — Brazilian elimination of mother-to-child HIV transmission: lessons for large-scale global health systems