EACS APK

EACS  Icon
0/5
0 Ratings
Developer
Antimicrobial Therapy, Inc.
Current Version
4.3.0
Date Published
File Size
54.2 MB
Package ID
com.sanfordguide.eacs.guidelines
Price
$ 0.00
Downloads
940+
Category
Android Apps
Genre
Medical

APK Version History

Version
4.3.0 (202204)
Architecture
universal
Release Date
August 21, 2023
Requirement
Android 4.0.3+
Version
4.3 (202102)
Architecture
universal
Release Date
August 21, 2023
Requirement
Android 4.0.3+
Version
4.2.1 (202009)
Architecture
universal
Release Date
August 21, 2023
Requirement
Android 4.0.3+
Version
4.2 (202008)
Architecture
universal
Release Date
August 21, 2023
Requirement
Android 4.0.3+
Version
4.1.1 (202004)
Architecture
universal
Release Date
August 21, 2023
Requirement
Android 4.0.3+
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot
  • EACS Screenshot

About Radio FM 90s

These Guidelines are developed by the European AIDS Clinical Society (EACS), a not-for-profit organization, whose mission is to promote excellence in standards of care, research and education in HIV-infection and related co-infections, and to actively engage in the formulation of public health policy, with the aim of reducing HIV disease burden across Europe.

The EACS Guidelines provide guidance for healthcare professionals on: assessment of HIV-positive persons, antiretroviral therapy (ART), prevention and management of co-morbidities, co-infections and opportunistic infections. EACS App features include full text search, user-created bookmarks and notes, various tables and more.

What's New in this version

This 2022 update of the EACS Guidelines includes revisions to adult ART (initial regimens, switch strategies, virologic failure, pregnancy and TB co-infection); DDIs; Co-morbidities; Viral hepatitis co-infections; Opportunistic infections and, especially, COVID-19; and paediatric HIV.