1 / 36

HIV Network Dinner August 30, 2016 Getting To zero (Part 1)

HIV Network Dinner August 30, 2016 Getting To zero (Part 1). Sponsored by: 2424 Mission Street, San Francisco 94110 Mercedes Azcarate. Dedication. Steve Keith, RN 7/4/1952 - 8/23/2016 Co-founder of the HIV/AIDS unit at SFGH (5B -> 5A). Panelists: (in order of appearance).

phill
Download Presentation

HIV Network Dinner August 30, 2016 Getting To zero (Part 1)

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. HIV Network DinnerAugust 30, 2016Getting To zero (Part 1) Sponsored by: 2424 Mission Street, San Francisco 94110 Mercedes Azcarate

  2. Dedication Steve Keith, RN 7/4/1952 - 8/23/2016 Co-founder of the HIV/AIDS unit at SFGH (5B -> 5A)

  3. Panelists:(in order of appearance) • Oliver Bacon, MD – Assistant Professor of Medicine, UCSF Division of HIV & Infectious Disease • Clarissa Ospina-Norvell, RN, MS, ANP – UCSF Division of HIV/AIDS & Infectious Disease at SFGH Ward 86 • Miranda Nordell – PrEP Coordinator, San Francisco Department of Public Health • Hyman Scott, MD, MPH – Medical Director, Clinical Research, Bridge HIV, SFDPH,Assistant Clinical Professor, UCSF • Austin Padilla – Youth, LGBT, HIV/AIDS Advocate, Office of District 6 Supervisor Jane Kim, Huckleberry Youth Program, Getting to Zero

  4. Objectives After this program participants will be able to explain: • what the Getting to Zero Initiative is • the role of the RAPID program • the role of the PrEP program • the role of fighting stigma • what we (network members) can do to make sure San Francisco succeeds in Getting to Zero

  5. Getting to Zero, Overview Oliver Bacon

  6. Improve HIV for persons living with disease and at risk in San Francisco • Maintain funding for existing efforts • Achieve success in signature initiatives • Secure funding and broad city/private sector support • Create innovative programs • Exchange best practices with other cities By 2020 90% fewer HIV infections 90% fewer HIV deaths Zero stigma and discrimination Getting to Zero is a multi-sector independent consortium, operating under principles of collective impact: “Long-term commitment of groups from different sectors to a common agenda to solve a specific social problem.”

  7. We have been heading toward zeroNew HIV diagnoses and deaths in SF 2010: ART at diagnosis; HIV test scale-up 2006: HIV test w/o written consent 2011: LINCS 2012: PrEP 2014 306 HIV diagnoses 177 HIV-related deaths

  8. The Goal: Test, Treat, Retain, and PrEP I. Universal, accessible HIV/STI testing -Frequency determined by risk -Testing for acute infection in high-Priority populations/settings MAKE TESTING FRIENDLY IF (-) IF(+) II. COMBINATION PREVENTION • Condoms and Risk Reduction coaching • Referrals for Substance use treatment, Mental health care • PEP for occasional exposures • PrEP for Pts with elevated risk: • Inconsistent condom use • Multiple partners/non-monogamous steady partnerships • Serodiscordant partners including periconception • h/o Rectal STIs, PEP • Reduce stigma, promote resilience III. Immediate ART • Eliminate OIs/AIDS • ↓ nonAIDS complications • ↓ transmission to partners • Retention in care to maintain suppression • Partner services to find recent sex partners -> test • Reduce Stigma, promote resilience

  9. SF G2Z SteeringCommittee

  10. RAPID Getting to Zero Clarissa Ospina-Norvell, NP August 30, 2016

  11. “RAPID” Rapid ART Program Initiative for New HIV Diagnosis A pilot project at Ward 86 saw it’s first patient in 2013 Vision is to provide immediate ART to all patients newly diagnosed with HIV

  12. Three Phases Pilot: newly diagnosed patients in acute infection Expanded Populations: Include other newly diagnosed patients (low CD4 count, OI, Sero-discordant couples) Clinic Standard for all untreated HIV positive patients

  13. New Positives: What do we do? • Disclosure • Post-test counseling/support /education • Partner and family notification • Linkage to primary care • Referral to research

  14. RAPID: What does it take? • Quick/Easy Access • Interdisciplinary Team approach • Drop-in/next day appointments • Eligibilty and Insurance support • Tracking/outreach • Psycho-social stabilization

  15. Why Immediate Treatment? Lack of immediate access to medical care following a new dx may be a barrier to testing, linkage and ART initiation. Decrease transmission.

  16. RAPID Regimens Truvada/DRV/r Descovy/DTG Genvoya

  17. Challenges • Coordination of team members • Navigating insurance coverage • Resource intense • Understanding factors influencing retention • Expanding services beyond SFGH

  18. Antoine (Acute) • 30yr old African-American MSM • Tested at SFGH ED 12/10/14 – requested HIV testing due to exposure (unprotected sex with HIV+man who stated he was on ART/undetectable • Last HIV negative one month ago; frequent tester ( per records from Magnet) • Rapid negative; VL sent; came back on 12/15/14 >2 million • Called into Ward 86 for disclosure/RAPID linkage to care on 12/15/14; • Suicide risk assessment • RAPID ART DTG+TVD • Barriers to linkage: • Mental Health: depression, past suicide attempt • Insurance: had started application for ACA/Covered California, unable to fill refill Rx of ART • Follow Up: 2 follow up visits; then 4 missed/cancelled visit; numerous outreach efforts; off meds for 3 months then finally linked to Kaiser and restarted on meds. Ongoing depression.

  19. Acknowledgements Oliver Bacon, MD Diane Havlir, MD Hiroyu, Hatano, MD Chris Pilcher, MD ZSFGH Clinical Laboratory PHAST/RAPID TEAM Fabioloa Calderon, SWA Susa Coffey, MD Diane Jones, RN Clarissa Ospina-Norvell, NP Joe Pelletier, RN Sandra Torres, SWA

  20. SF Department of Public Health PrEP Implementation Efforts and SF Getting to Zero Initiative Hyman Scott, MD, MPH Medical Director, Clinical Research, Bridge HIV, SFDPH Assistant Clinical Professor, UCSF Miranda Nordell PrEP Coordinator San Francisco Health Network

  21. STD Clinic as a Sentinel Site for PrEP surveillance Since 2011, HIV-negative MSM seeking routine sexual health services have been asked: • Have you heard of PrEP? • Are you currently on PrEP?

  22. PrEP knowledge and use among HIV-negative MSM at SFCC

  23. PrEP demographics compared with new diagnoses in 2015

  24. Create a sustainablecity-wide model of delivery • Build capacity • Enhance funding • City-wide PrEP Navigators Reach those populations that are currently underserved • Youth, transwomen and men, MSM of color, people who use drugs, incarcerated • Expand and diversify Ambassador program • Reach into neighborhoods and community organizations Monitor our progress and use data to inform strategies and decisions • Integrate data from diverse sources 2016 GTZ PrEP Goals and Priorities

  25. Collective PrEP expansion efforts PrEP delivery sites >30 clinics >100 clinical providers and >50 HIV test counselors trained on PrEP delivery and referrals/navigation >10 PrEP navigators funded across clinics and CBOs

  26. Getting to Zero PrEP Ambassadors

  27. Citywide PrEP Navigator’s group Created in April 2016 • ~25 attended first meeting representing PrEP navigators in SF, East Bay, and South Bay Provide networking, support, share best practices, troubleshooting Key issues • What is a PrEP navigator? • Different organizations have different capacity for delivering PrEP vs. identifying those at risk and referring / assisting with access to PrEP • Training needed: • Addressing access barriers • Transgender competency • PrEP and youth – helping folks on parents’ insurance • PrEP and HIV – using common language and consistent messages • Effectiveness of PrEP • Toronto patient

  28. PrEP Access Majority (90%?) in SF wanting PrEP can access it for little or no costs through insurance, Medi-Cal, assistance programs for out-of-pocket costs and for uninsured. Access at SF AIDS Foundation/Strut, Kaiser, SF City Clinic, API Wellness, SF Health Network clinics, private providers Gaps: • Youth w/parents’ insurance who don’t want their parents to know they are on PrEP • Access for uninsured adolescents • Some Medicare plans have high out-of-pocket costs for PrEP and don’t accept assistance programs • Pts with “bronze” insurance plans have high out-of-pocket costs and assistance programs don’t cover all costs

  29. PrEP in the SF Health Network • SF Health Network is an integrated primary care delivery model across SF • 14 Community Based Clinics and 4 hospital based clinics • PrEP Program started in early 2015: • Develop local clinical PrEP guidelines • Establish PrEP referral clinic at Ward 86 • Provider trainings on PrEP implementation: Over 100 clinicians (MDs, NPs) trained since 1/2015

  30. PrEP Demonstration Project SFDPH is one of 12 jurisdictions nationally participating in this CDC-funded 3 year demonstration project • Increase uptake of PrEP among MSM of color and transgender persons • Enhance Data to Care activities • D2C uses HIV surveillance and other data to identify HIV-diagnosed persons not in care, and to link, engage, or re-engage them in HIV medical care

  31. Strategies to increase PrEP uptake among MSM and transgender persons Formative work with actual/potential users as well as providers Increase user knowledge and interest in PrEP • Social marketing campaign, Popular Opinion Leader Increase linkage of focus populations to PrEP • City-wide PrEP navigator using innovative social media strategies • “Data-to-PrEP”– use of STI surveillance to link patients diagnosed with rectal STIs and syphilis to PrEP • Learning community for PrEP navigators across SF: share best practices Increase primary care provider engagement in PrEP • Public Health Detailing

  32. Acknowledgements Susan Buchbinder Albert Liu Stephanie Cohen Monica Gandhi Diane Havlir Robert Blue Oliver Bacon Anne Hirozawa Tracey Packer Susan Scheer Patients Study participants Early adopters

  33. Getting to Zero Stigma Austin did not use slides - and we lacked capacity to record what he said, but you can hear him here: https://ww2.kqed.org/perspectives/2015/04/13/new-generation-of-aids-activists/ And also read this: http://www.gettingtozerosf.org/importance-remembering-social-drivers-hivaids/ • Austin Padilla

  34. Please specify to which one of the panelists you are addressing your question or comment QUESTIONS & ANSWERSand DISCUSSION

  35. On the Web: • http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/06/health/san-francisco-hiv-aids-treatment.html • Join the effort: • http://betablog.org/getting-to-zero-how-san-francisco-is-making-progress/

  36. September 27, 2016 (Venue TBD) Invitations will be e-mailed. HIV NETWORK DINNERGETTING TO ZERO (PART 2) Save the date:

More Related