1 / 1

Background

N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419 Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429. N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419

lunea-clark
Download Presentation

Background

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419 Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429 N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419 Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429 N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419 Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429 N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419 Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429 N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419 Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429 N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419 Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429 N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419 Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429 N = 1281 Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N= 433 Arm 2 (information only and offer of testing) N= 419 Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429 Adoption of HIV Counseling and Testing Following Completion of Randomized Clinical TrialLouise Haynes1, Beverly Holmes2 Camille Peay2, Lisa Metsch3 1Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, 2Lexington Richland Alcohol and Drug Abuse Council, 3 University of Miami Background Clinical Implementation (Pilot) State-Wide Implementation Substance abuse continues to be a major factor in the transmission of HIV/AIDS, via injection and sexual risk behavior. Encouraging persons at risk for HIV to be tested is one of the main HIV prevention strategies in the United States. Previous studies have shown that many substance abuse treatment programs do not offer on-site HIV testing . Although the NIDA Clinical Trials Network was established to “bridge the gap” between research and practice, dissemination of evidence based practices studied in the CTN is challenging. Following completion of the study. LRADAC adopted (for clinical practice) the counseling (RESPECT2) and testing procedures used in the trial. The testing and counseling were piloted in the detoxification unit beginning September 2009. Each new admission to detox was seen individually and offered an appointment for confidential testing and counseling. Initially, the counseling and testing were conducted by staff trained as part of CTN0032. Subsequently, the research staff trained a program staff member to conduct the testing and counseling. Agency-wide implementation to follow in 2010. • In Fiscal Year 2010, there were 12 local substance abuse treatment agencies that were endorsed to conduct HIV testing. • In Fiscal Year 2011, an additional 4 agencies were added. • Figure #1 compares LRADAC to all of the additional state supported substance abuse treatment providers who conducted HIV testing in South Carolina from 7/1/2010 to 1/31/2011. • Clients Tested (LRADAC Detox Program) • September 8, 2009 to April 15, 2010 • 32% Female • 49% Black • (consistent with patient population in detox) • 319 Rapid Tests Offered • 194 Accepted (61%) • Reasons offered for not accepting test • 69% Recently tested • 10% (of those refusing test) reported being HIV positive • Other reasons: perceived no risk, • undecided about being tested, not interested Methods • In 2010, the National Institute on Drug Abuse Clinical Trials Network (CTN) completed a study designed to evaluate strategies for providing rapid HIV testing in inpatient and outpatient substance use treatment • programs. This study demonstrated the value of on-site rapid HIV testing in drug treatment centers but found no additional benefit from HIV sexual risk-reduction counseling. LRADAC, a community-based treatment program (CTP) in Columbia, SC and a participating CTP in the Southern Consortium Node of the NIDA Clinical Trials Network (CTN), was one of twelve sites. Staff to conduct HIV testing and HIV risk-reduction counseling were recruited and hired prior to implementation of the clinical trial. The staff were trained and certified to conduct testing and counseling as per study protocol. • Participant Inclusion Criteria: • Participating in substance abuse treatment service at the site • Adult • English speaking • Willing to sign locator form • HIV negative or unknown status • Eligible sites • Not offering testing • Inpatient and outpatient sites • Methadone and psychosocial rehab • Study • N=1281 • Arm 1 (offer of testing and counseling) N=433 • Arm 2 (offer of testing and information) N= 419 • Arm 3 (offer of referral for off site testing) N= 429 Figure #1:LRADAC compared to all of the additional state supported substance abuse treatment providers who are conducting HIV tests in South Carolina. Agency- Wide Implementation Conclusion Following the pilot LRADAC moved to full implementation, including both detox and outpatient programs. • Clients Tested (Agency-Wide) • April 16, 2010 to May 31, 2011 • 490 Clients Tested • 33% Acceptance Rate • 40% Female • 59% Black • Reasons offered for not accepting test • 41% Recently tested • 46% No Risk Factors • Example of successful “science to practice” • Participation in research can facilitate programmatic changes in community treatment programs • Substance abuse clients in detox were receptive to offer of HIV testing and counseling • Potential to reach beyond agency – state wide implementation References State-Wide Expansion of Project Brown, L S. ; Kritz, St ; Goldsmith, R. J ; Bini, E J. ; Rotrosen, J ; Baker, S ; Robinson, JA. ; McAuliffe, P. Characteristics of Substance Abuse Treatment Programs Providing Services for HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis C Virus Infection, and Sexually Transmitted Infections: The National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 2006;30:315-321. [doi: 1016/j.jsat.2006.02.006]. Haynes LF, Korte JE, Holmes BE, Gooden L, Matheson T, Feaster DJ, Leff JA, Wilson L, Metsch LR, Schackman BR. HIV rapid testing in substance abuse treatment: Implementation following a clinical trial. Eval Program Planning. 2011 Feb 28. [Epub ahead of print] • Well established collaborative relationship between Southern Consortium Node (MUSC) and SC Single State Authority (DAODAS) • DAODAS’ multi-year attempt to establish HIV testing programs in SC’s substance abuse treatment system had progressed slowly • Training required to certify substance abuse treatment staff was obtained through the state health department (DHEC), and training requirements were burdensome and not tailored for substance abuse providers • Collaboration between Southern Consortium Node, LRADAC, DAODAS, and DHEC resulted in development of certification course held at 2010 SC School of Alcohol and Drug Studies. DAODAS offered scholarships to substance abuse providers.

More Related