Source
- Best Practices Compilation (13)
- IHIP (10)
- Technical Assistance Provider Innovation Network (TAP-in) (10)
- Center for Innovation and Engagement (3)
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (2)
- AIDS Action Foundation (2)
- U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (2)
- Wisconsin Department of Health Services (1)
- University of Washington (1)
- Center for Engaging Black MSM across the Care Continuum (1)
- AETC National Coordinating Resource Center (NCRC) (1)
- NC-LINK (1)
- Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals (1)
- SPNS Systems Linkages Project (1)
- SPNS Latino Access Initiative (1)
- AIDS Alliance for Children Youth and Families (1)
- Yale University School of Medicine (1)
- SPNS Sexually Transmitted Infections Initiative (1)
- National Clinician Consultation Center (1)
- HRSA HIV/AIDS Bureau (HAB) (1)
- UCSF Center for AIDS Prevention Studies (1)
- Virginia Department of Health (1)
- Massachusetts Department of Public Health (1)
- HRSA Bureau of Primary Health Care (BPHC) (1)
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64 items found
Best Practices • 04/09/2024
Best Practices • 03/20/2024
Best Practices • 01/03/2024
Best Practices • 01/03/2024
Best Practices • 12/15/2023
Best Practices • 08/02/2023
Webinars • 07/25/2023
Webinars • 07/25/2023
Best Practices • 04/28/2023
Best Practices • 03/28/2023
Webinars • 03/23/2023
Conference Presentations • 12/07/2022
Best Practices • 11/28/2022
Webinars • 09/28/2022
Best Practices • 07/07/2022
Webinars • 07/05/2022
Best Practices • 07/01/2022
Best Practices • 04/01/2022
Conference Presentations • 12/07/2022
Webinars • 09/28/2022
Best Practices • 04/01/2022
Best Practices • 04/09/2024
Through the Test & Treat Rapid Access (TTRA) Program, clients with a new HIV diagnosis in Miami-Dade County can access ART, receive other services and counseling, start enrolling in RWHAP, and connect to HIV primary care during the initial visit. At Borinquen Health Care Center, one of the clinical sites participating in TTRA, 76% of clients were virally suppressed within three months of receiving a rapid ART start, and 95% were retained in care for 12 months.
Best Practices • 03/20/2024
Through the Practice Transformation Project, the Native American Community Clinic and Midwest AIDS Education and Training Center developed strategies to increase testing and linkage to care within the American Indian/Alaska Native population, and for those who inject drugs and are experiencing homelessness. These ongoing efforts have increased HIV testing rates by 10 percentage points through harm reduction, community outreach, and culturally sensitive strategies.
Best Practices • 01/03/2024
Positive Care Center implemented the Rapid Access program in 2018, providing clients with ART on the same day as HIV diagnosis. Pharmacists, embedded within Positive Care Center’s care team, help clients with their treatment plans and adherence strategies. Over 90% of clients served through Rapid Access in 2021 received ART on the same day as diagnosis, and 82% of clients were retained in care at six months.
Best Practices • 01/03/2024
The Huntridge Family Clinic launched the Rapid Start Initiative to provide same-day ART treatment and comprehensive case management to clients with a new diagnosis of HIV. Over 90% of clients received ART on the same day as diagnosis, and 78% of clients were retained in care within the first year of starting treatment.
Best Practices • 12/15/2023
Virginia Rapid Start launched with HIV care providers across the state with goals to initiate ART for clients within 14 days of HIV diagnosis and to improve access to, and retention in, high-quality HIV care and support services. Through Virginia Rapid Start, providers initiated ART medications within an average of four days of HIV diagnosis, as compared with the statewide average of 28 days. Virginia Rapid Start clients had higher rates of viral suppression compared to both the RWHAP Part B overall and Virginia overall. The success of Virginia Rapid Start led VDH to expand the program to the entire Virginia RWHAP Part B.
Best Practices • 08/02/2023
JumpstART launched in 2016 as part of New York State’s Ending the Epidemic initiative, changing the service delivery model of eight sexual health clinics to include an initial prescription of ART after an HIV diagnosis and prior to linkage to the community provider. Between November 2016 and September 2018, 60% of JumpstART clients received ART on the same day as diagnosis. JumpstART clients were also more likely to reach viral suppression within three months compared to non-JumpstART clients.
Webinars • 07/25/2023
Webinar series featuring HIV care innovations developed under HRSA SPNS projects.
Webinars • 07/25/2023
This webinar features Addressing STIs: Ask. Test. Treat. Repeat., an intervention for people with HIV or those who are vulnerable to HIV acquisition.
Best Practices • 04/28/2023
Viviendo Valiente aims to reduce ethnic disparities in HIV care and outcomes by providing culturally responsive services to the Latino/a community, specifically to people of Mexican descent. It is a multi-level intervention, featuring individual-, group-, and community-level activities, that links people to HIV care, offers HIV education and health literacy in group sessions, and promotes community-level testing for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Viviendo Valiente had positive impacts on HIV testing, retention in care, viral suppression, and client satisfaction.
Best Practices • 03/28/2023
Nine sites implemented four evidence-based interventions, collectively known as Addressing STIs: Ask.Test.Treat.Repeat. The four intervention components are audio computer-assisted self-interview sexual history taking, patient self-collection of urogenital and extragenital site chlamydia/gonorrhea nucleic acid amplification test specimens, sexual and gender minority welcoming indicators, and provider training, with the overall goal to routinize STI screening, testing, and treatment in primary care. The interventions increased routine STI screening and testing of bacterial STIs based on reported behavioral risk.
Webinars • 03/23/2023
Review of concept of status neutral (access to HIV services regardless of HIV status).
Conference Presentations • 12/07/2022
Review of challenges, facilitators, and best practices for routine screening, linkage, and rapid ART in two emergency departments, including during COVID-19.
Best Practices • 11/28/2022
Bienestar developed TransActivate to improve timely engagement and retention in HIV care among Latina transgender women. Linkage coordinators/peer navigators use a strengths-based approach to help clients reach their goals of entering and staying in medical care to ultimately reach viral suppression.
Webinars • 09/28/2022
Partnership between jail staff and public health prevention staff created new data communication systems and bundled services for clients upon release.
Best Practices • 07/07/2022
The Ruth M. Rothstein CORE Center launched Proyecto Promover to decrease HIV testing-related stigma, increase awareness of HIV status, and increase early linkage to and retention in care among Mexicanos with HIV. The program operates at the community level through social marketing, educational talks, networking, and testing. On the individual level, Proyecto Promover uses one-on-one conversations to identify and overcome barriers related to care engagement and retention. Evaluation showed promising rates of HIV testing, retention in care, and viral suppression.
Webinars • 07/05/2022
Kickoff of a national campaign to showcase how RWHAP leaders have been innovating to achieve the goal of ending the HIV epidemic.
Best Practices • 07/01/2022
Routine Universal Screening for HIV (RUSH) provides non-medical case management services, opt-out HIV testing, and linkage to care for emergency department patients. The intervention automatically screens patients for HIV if they are aged 16 years or older, are having an IV inserted, or are having blood drawn for other reasons, unless the patient opts out. RUSH provides access to testing earlier in disease progression, bridging disparities that primarily impact people of color. It also promotes linkage to and retention in care for those with a positive HIV test result. Clients with a positive HIV test in the emergency department who had a prior diagnosis of HIV were more likely to be retained in care and to reach viral suppression.
Best Practices • 04/01/2022
Collection of implementation guides on evidence-informed best practices in HIV care delivery.