1 / 15

Director: Larry Ouellet, Ph.D.

Community Outreach Intervention Projects Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics School of Public Health UIC. Director: Larry Ouellet, Ph.D. Director Community Services:Jaime Delgado Founder: Wayne Wiebel, Ph.D. COIP. Founded 1986 by Dr. Wayne Wiebel

albina
Download Presentation

Director: Larry Ouellet, Ph.D.

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. Community Outreach Intervention ProjectsDivision of Epidemiology and BiostatisticsSchool of Public HealthUIC Director: Larry Ouellet, Ph.D. Director Community Services:Jaime Delgado Founder: Wayne Wiebel, Ph.D.

  2. COIP • Founded 1986 by Dr. Wayne Wiebel • Two objectives • Provide an HIV prevention intervention for injecting drug users (IDUs) who were not in drug treatment • Evaluate the intervention

  3. How do you access out-of-treatment IDUs? • Illicit drug users hide their drug use • fear imprisonment • fear losing their children • fear losing benefits • Distrust ‘outsiders’ and ‘insiders’ • Illicit nature of drug use • Often treated poorly by mainstream • IDUs said not to care about health

  4. Populations Accessed by COIP • Persons at high-risk for HIV, hepatitis, syphilis, other STIs • drug users, sex workers • MSM, particularly minority & non-gay identified • sex partners of HIV high-risk populations • Urban communities of color • Including ‘straight’ populations • ID program • heating assistance program • Suburban & exurban drug users

  5. Indigenous Leader Outreach Model • Use former IDUs to deliver intervention • they have access to the target population • shared experience: credible and empathetic • ability to provide services enhances likelihood that indigenous staff will become valued and trusted by community • Target social networks • change group norms to support risk reduction • long term presence in targeted area

  6. Five Storefront Offices 1. South Side: West Englewood • original site, Grand Boulevard 2. Near Northwest Side: Humboldt Park • original site, West Town 3. West Side: Austin • site moved once 4. North Side: Uptown 5. Southeast Side: South Chicago 6. Motorhome: North Lawndale & Near West Side

  7. Southeast Side Fieldstation

  8. Current Services • Street outreach • HIV counseling and testing • case management • counseling: drug abuse, risk reduction • free medical, mental health, pharmacy care for HIV+ • referrals to drug treatment and many other services • testing for syphilis, other STDs • support groups • friendly peers to talk with

  9. Research Components • Epidemiologic research • conduct surveys • biologic testing (HIV) • Ethnographic research • ethnographers teamed with outreach workers • guide the implementation of the intervention • conduct research • e.g., how differences in “shooting galleries” affect HIV risk practices and intervention strategies

  10. Recommendations to Address Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities

  11. 2008 Latino/Hispanic AIDSLeadership Summit January 29th & 30th Washington, D.C.

  12. LATINO COMMISSION ON AIDS Research and Evaluation Department 24 W. 25th Street 9th floor New York, NY 10010

  13. Immigration HIV/AIDS Services Regardless of Legal Status Protect Current Services Remove Barriers Created by New State Laws

  14. Prevention • Increase HIV testing • Integrate HIV into all health messages • Increase testing in non-traditional settings • Increase number of indigenous health workers trained to do HIV testing

  15. Research • Fund research that uses socio/ecological/ biological approach and CBPR strategies and principles • Increase flexibility with CDC funding to evaluate and develop homegrown interventions for Latinos • Conduct literature reviews of existing research on Latinos

More Related