Resource Center
Resource Center
A CHAI-supported study published in AIDS describes pilot programs in Malawi and Zimbabwe to integrate TB and HIV testing on the same near-point-of-care devices within facilities.
Read moreOur monthly check-in with staff from around the world. Learn more about the people who work at CHAI.
Read moreTuberculosis can be prevented with treatment. But in Zimbabwe, long treatment duration and the fear of painful side effects made preventative therapy a hard sell for some patients. CHAI’s Makaita Gombe explains the difference a new treatment has made for the people she works with every day.
Read moreGetting people to go to the doctor as soon as they have symptoms is a big part of the problem we need to solve. This requires a deeper understanding of what drives someone's choices to seek care (or not) and their journey, a critical first step in developing a precision public health strategy.
Read moreWe are pleased to release our annual report. This year's theme is 'transformational change'.
Read moreFinding and treating people with tuberculosis is critical to slow the disease. Preventing it in the first place will help end the epidemic.
Read moreThe theme for the 2018 Annual Report is ‘Our Approach in Action’. There are examples in each program section of a time that CHAI’s approach was successfully applied to support our partners toward our mission.
Read moreThe 2017 Annual Report looks back at what we have accomplished over the year, as well as toward the goals that we have set for each of our programs over the next five to 10 years.
Read moreTuberculosis (TB) claims more lives each year than any other infectious disease – a global total of 1.4 million deaths. India accounts for one-third of these, along with 2.7 million new cases each year. The disease afflicts both rural and urban areas, but crowded mega-cities are major sources of new infection.
Read moreThis World TB Day, CHAI recognizes that fighting tuberculosis in India is key to eliminating the disease worldwide. Tuberculosis is one of the biggest killers in India, with two people dying every three minutes due to TB. It is estimated that 40 percent of the Indian population has tuberculosis. In fact, in 2016, India accounted for 27 percent of new TB cases and one-third of TB deaths in HIV negative patients, globally.
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