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 11 - 20 of 29
Researchers conducted a prospective study, involving 402 male adolescents (ages 13 to 17), on the use of the PrePex device to perform voluntary medical male circumcision (VMMC) at... read more
Researchers assessed the safety, effectiveness, and acceptability of providing seven, rather than all 14, sizes of the ShangRing for adult voluntary medical male circumcision in... read more
A qualitative study conducted in Harare, Zimbabwe, found that parents who opted for early infant male circumcision (EIMC) and health care workers thought that EIMC was a safe and... read more
Early infant male circumcision (EIMC) conducted by nurse-midwives using the AccuCirc device proved safe, feasible, and acceptable to parents in Zimbabwe. The AccuCirc device has... read more
This article in Current HIV Research describes a study to determine the acceptability and feasibility of introducing voluntary medical male circumcision for HIV prevention in... read more
Burundi’s national communication strategy for promoting male circumcision as a method of HIV prevention includes the theoretical and conceptual framework for the strategy and... read more
This report presents the results of a pilot study on women's perspective on medical male circumcision, which was conducted in South Africa as part of a larger multi-country study... read more