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PROJECT IN-CARE Chicago’s Positive Charge Project Roman Buenrostro, AIDS Foundation of Chicago

PROJECT IN-CARE Chicago’s Positive Charge Project Roman Buenrostro, AIDS Foundation of Chicago Sunday July 22, 2012. AGENDA. The need we responded to What the project looked like in Year 1? Changes made to the project in Year 2? What have we learned so far?. THE NEED.

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PROJECT IN-CARE Chicago’s Positive Charge Project Roman Buenrostro, AIDS Foundation of Chicago

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  1. PROJECT IN-CARE Chicago’s Positive Charge Project Roman Buenrostro, AIDS Foundation of Chicago Sunday July 22, 2012

  2. AGENDA • The need we responded to • What the project looked like in Year 1? • Changes made to the project in Year 2? • What have we learned so far?

  3. THE NEED Of the new cases of HIV infection between 2006-2008: • 51% are Non-Hispanic African American while comprising 18% of the EMA population • 16% are Hispanic matching roughly their estimated EMA population size • 64% are MSM identified

  4. UNMET NEED ESTIMATES Total local estimate is 52% of all PLWHIVA are not in care • 52% of MSM diagnosed are out of care • 40% of MSM/IDU are out of care • 50% of NH/African American are out of care • 49% of Hispanic are out of care How do we (AFC and our partners) address these statistics?

  5. Project IN-CARE: Components RED = New modalities incorporated into our current system.

  6. Project IN-CARE: Our Goals • Identify and monitor men of color living with HIV/AIDS who are at greater risk for treatment non-adherence. • Identify the specific barriers that prevent men of color from accessing and remaining adherent to HIV care. • Better understand the needs of project IN-CARE clients. • Help providers across the city develop better targeted linkage-to-care and retention interventions.

  7. Components By Site- First Year AIDS Foundation of Chicago • Lead agency • Develop the Access/Retention-to-Care Screening Tool for pilot testing • Develop the peer health navigation protocol and training collaboratively • Coordinate project-wide data collection and management activities • Develop service tracking logs and convene regular meetings with each site

  8. Brothers Health Collective • Identify and enroll clients through their existing prevention outreach and testing activities Howard Brown Health Center • Administer retention screening tool • Enroll newly diagnosed clients at STD/HIV clinics and/or initial client visits to primary care clinics

  9. CORE Center • Administer retention screening tool • Enroll newly diagnosed clients at STD/HIV clinics and/or initial client visits to primary care clinics TPAN • Administer retention screening tool • Identify and enroll clients through their existing prevention outreach and testing activities • Treatment Education Advocacy Mobilization (TEAM) group will be adapted and utilized for IN-CARE clients

  10. Year 2 CHANGES • In an effort to serve more participants, we expanded our we expanded our eligibility criteria to include non-men of color MSM • Removed the group level education component as a requirement for IN-CARE participants • Consolidated the Peer Health Navigation to three sites due to an underperforming partner

  11. Lessons Learned • Planned outreach strategies (e.g. internet outreach through social networking sites) not successful especially for “out of care” individuals • Multiple access/retention to care intervention initiatives launched concurrently -important to participate in service provider planning meetings , and ongoing meetings

  12. Lessons Learned Elements needed for Peer Health Navigation services to be successful: • Organizational structure and processes significantly impact service delivery • Buy-in is key from: • Organization • Administration • Staff

  13. Lessons Learned • Peer services were meant to be a bridge into standard care, but it is proven challenging to focus on care with poverty, substance use, incarceration, and housing instability • Our local project included several questions that were trauma-related and found that 78% of our clients reported having been exposed to a crime-related event, 42% have been victims of physical violence, and 40% have been victims of sexual abuse.

  14. Contact information: Roman Buenrostro Director of Special Projects AIDS Foundation of Chicago 200 West Jackson, Suite 2200 Chicago, IL 60606 312-334-0960 (phone) 312-922-2916 (fax) rbuenrostro@aidschicago.org

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