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“ HELP” HIV/AIDS Education in Lithuania Program. Building the Capacity of the Health and Social Care System in Case Management. J. Csiszar MD. MSc. MBA IAS Conference July 2010. Content. Introduction of Project HOPE Background The Problem Goal and Objectives
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“HELP” HIV/AIDS Education in Lithuania Program Building the Capacity of the Health and Social Care System in Case Management J. Csiszar MD. MSc. MBA IAS Conference July 2010
Content • Introduction of Project HOPE • Background • The Problem • Goal and Objectives • The Uniqueness of our approach • Results • Conclusion
Introduction of Project HOPE Since 1958 • Improving health via education training,targeted humanitarian assistance, health policyresearch • Present in 5 continents, 37 countries • Core strengths: • Health Professional Education • Health of Mother and Children • Health Systems & FacilitiesDevelopment • Infectious Diseases • Non -Communicable Diseases
Background • Turbulent political social and economic environment for transitional countries • Loss of safe employment, social security and disintegration of safety nets in the society • Ethnic minorities and other marginalized groups are even more dramatically affected than the mainstream population • Transparent borders, availability of cheap drugs result in a surge of HIV/AIDS among marginalized groups (ethnic minorities, prisoners, IDU) • Existing health and social systems cannot successfully cope with the epidemic due to fragmentation and lack of coordination between their services • Long term commitment to CEE countries in transition • Several years of successful collaboration with Lithuanian partners on Health Care Management program • Successful experience with multi professional team training and network development
The problem • Doctor centered care • Complex, fragmented services- difficult to navigate by the patient • Limited awareness in the health and social sector of the needs of PWLHA, risk groups, and people with special needs • Lack of multidisciplinary team culture • Communications, coordination, continuity across services is poor
Goal: To place the patient in the centre of prevention and care efforts and design a program that addresses his/her unique - health and social- needs in a comprehensive , holistic fashion.
Objectives Policy level • Integrated case management model • Regulatory framework • System for supervision, follow up , quality management Institutional level • Create a network of collaborating institutions • Develop Institutional framework for continuing training (CPD) and supervision • Create a pool of Master Trainers affiliated with the National AIDS Institute • Reduce Stigma in health institutions • Build mechanism for monitoring and follow up of implementation Provider level • Improve KASP • Reduce stigma and discrimination • Improve multidisciplinary teamwork and coordination • Develop organization, communication and management skills • Facilitate the development of team projects • Improve cost effectiveness of the services by avoiding duplication and waste
The uniqueness of the approach • Multidisciplinary team training (introductory course) • Selection of candidates for ToT • Training of trainers • Cascading the training throughout the country • Shadow faculty, mentoring • Locally owned program
Results Coverage
Results • 231 participants trained • 153 organizations represented • 268522 clients reached annually
Conclusions • The culture of multidisciplinary teamwork, communication, collaboration and continuity of care is essential to the delivery of value to patients • Building local training capacity was key to scaling up the effect of our program • Residential, multidisciplinary team setting to promote the culture of collaboration and networking has proven successful • Countries with similar background may benefit from replicating this model