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813 Wake County

813 Wake County. Lessons Learned and What’s to Come. Community Assessment. Discussions with Health Department administration and outreach staff Individual interviews with STD clinic staff Meetings with CBOs and Health Task Forces Focus groups with Adolescent community members

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813 Wake County

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  1. 813 Wake County Lessons Learned and What’s to Come

  2. Community Assessment • Discussions with Health Department administration and outreach staff • Individual interviews with STD clinic staff • Meetings with CBOs and Health Task Forces • Focus groups with Adolescent community members • GIS mapping of STDs

  3. Gaining Access to the Community Community Leaders Outreach Managers Community Access

  4. Areas of Attention • Geographic clustering • Heterogeneity of community • Institutional barriers • Screening to diagnose asymptomatic disease • STD/HIV co-infection

  5. Community Outreach - Many Lessons Learned • Substantial mistrust of "research” • - particularly among the managerial and outreach levels • - managerial gatekeepers act to “protect” the community • Substantial mistrust of "partnerships" between university and county health department • - concern over lack of community involvement in grant submission

  6. Community Focus GroupsOBJECTIVES • To identify those factors that serve as barriers to accessing STD/HIV testing in the target population • To obtain recommendations on how best to facilitate testing and treatment in this population

  7. Sample N=10 groups Recruitment Instrument Based on previous outreach Validity assessed 4 issues explored Data Collection Analysis Software: Qsr NVIVO MS Word Theory informed Pilot tested - In same population METHODS

  8. BARRIERS Let’s say you decide that you want to get tested, what kinds of issues might come up? RECOMMENDATIONS …now, think of the ideal, easiest or best way for people to get tested or treated for STDs, what would it be like? INSTRUMENT:Relevant Questions

  9. KEY BARRIERS • Rude staff • Cost • Intrapersonal barriers • Confidentiality Concerns

  10. Women Rude staff Cost Confidentiality Long wait Men Intrapersonal factors Confidentiality concerns Cost Addiction The SWAB! Key Barriers by Gender

  11. Barriers:Mistrust • Substantial mistrust of State and Federal (i.e. CDC) organizations • - managerial levels uncertain of benefit for community • - STDs are priority of State/Federal organizations, not community?

  12. RECOMMENDATIONS • Convenient location • Integrate into other services • Staff who are trained in sensitivity • Ensure confidentiality • Increase outreach efforts • Welcoming clinic environment

  13. Recommendations • Increased access to general medical services is considered more important than access to STD services • Community members want “mainstream” access to care (HMO settings, physician offices, ER), not clinic

  14. Phase IIExpanded STD Screening • Expanded STD screening and Incident HIV infection in clients obtaining HIV testing in STD clinic • STD/HIV Testing in County Hospital ED • STD Screening in HIV Clinic setting • STD screening in HIV C&T site

  15. HIV INFECTION AND PREVALENT STDs AT TIME OF HIV TESTING Estimate the point prevalence of : -HSV-2 (serology) -chlamydial infection, gonorrhea (NAAT) -syphilis (serology) in patients undergoing HIV testing at the Wake County Human Services STD clinic. Determine the relationship between concurrent STD diagnosis (symptomatic and asymptomatic) and HIV test result. Determine incidence of HIV by detuned HIV assay and p24 antigen (Primary HIV)

  16. Infection Rates HIV Test Study in STD Clinic

  17. HIV Care Purpose: - Determine the incidence/prevalence of GC, CT, syphilis, TV and HSV-2 in people with HIV who attend the Wake County HIV clinic and other sites for routine care - Determine the relationship of STD prevalence and HIV status as indicated by CD4 count and viral load.

  18. HIV Care • Cohort of individuals will be followed for one year • Baseline and ~ every 3 months • Behavioral data • Blood for syphilis and HSV-2 testing • Urine for GC and Ct testing; TV in men • Self-collected vaginal swab from women for TV culture

  19. HIV Care Behavioral Data includes: • Number and type of sexual partners in the previous three months • HIV serostatus of sexual partnerships • STD infection in sexual partners • Condom use (last time had sex) • Self-report of previous STD symptoms or diagnosis • Interim STD symptoms and possible diagnosis/treatment elsewhere

  20. HIV Care Study

  21. HIV/STD Co-Infection Females

  22. HIV/STD Co-Infections Males

  23. Conclusions • STD screening is feasible in HIV care • Preliminary results suggests high rates of TV infection in HIV infected • High Rate of HSV/HIV co-infection • High Rate of + syphilis serology

  24. 813 UNC • Bill Miller • Marlene Smurzynski • Trang Nguyen • Dionne Law • Chandra Ford • Betsey Tilson CDC • Kim Fox • Katie Irwin • Rheta Barnes

  25. #1 barrier for women Perceived as Unprofessional Rude Prejudicial “I went to get tested at the HD. I had a nurse there, I’ll never forget…she talked to me like I was a speck of dirt on the floor, because I had had …unprotected sex… When I left there, I was walking down the sidewalk crying cause she made me feel that bad…” - Homeless female BARRIER: Rude Staff

  26. Cost “…’cause I just went to have a test done, and it cost me $15, and I was like,…A person in my status, homeless, I don’t have that kind of money.” - homeless female Intra-personal Factors perceived risk fear embarrassment, shame denial BARRIERS

  27. BARRIER: Confidentiality Concerns • Visibility: Being identified by peers • Confusion : ‘Confidential’ vs. ‘Anonymous’ • Broken Confidentiality: Staff sharing patient information to others in the community • Privacy: Indiscrete or careless disclosure by staff during patients’ visit

  28. Visibility “…I’m in contact with a lot of women that go to the Women’s Ctr., and if I’m there to do that, that may not be something I want everybody to see.” -Homeless female Confidential vs. Anonymous “The people that are testing it are going to know. Somebody else is going to know, cause they got to send it here to get it tested…” -In-treatment, male SA BARRIER:Confidentiality

  29. Community Identified Priorities • Cardiovascular disease • Violence • HIV infection

  30. HIV Test Study in STD Clinic

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