Resource Library

The Clearinghouse’s Resource Library contains hundreds of resources on voluntary medical male circumcision for HIV prevention. You may search the entire site, including these resources, by adding key words in the Search box located in the upper right corner of the website. The Resource Library enables you to browse resources by topic and filter them by different categories. Choose a topic from the menu on the right side of the page to generate a list of resources by topic, then use the filters to narrow the results. (Click on the “+” icon next to the topic name to expand the nested topics.) You may also filter the entire list of resources in the library by document type, country, language, and year of publication.

 

Resources

Displaying 1 - 10 of 14
In a video designed to inform deaf men about voluntary medical male circumcision, two men have a signed conversation about the procedure and its benefits. One of the men tells a... read more
In this presentation, the presenter described the partnership between Botswana’s national voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) programme and school leadership to conduct... read more
This article, published in the Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine, examines male youth’s knowledge about male circumcision and their perceptions of HIV risk in Zimbabwe.
As part of a pilot “retreat” intervention in Kenya, 116 male youth who were living on the streets were provided with voluntary medical male circumcision and HIV education and life... read more
The results of an assessment conducted in Tanzania to identify barriers to health services facing adolescents — particularly disadvantaged adolescents — are presented in this... read more
In response to a plateau in demand for voluntary medical male circumcision in South Africa, researchers sought to identify factors influencing demand among male school-based youth... read more
This article, published in PLoS One, reports on the acceptability and feasibility of the soccer-based “Make the Cut” intervention among schoolboys in Uganda. Circumcised “coaches... read more