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Getting to Zero:

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Employer Health Benefits Annual Survey. End-of-Life studies. ED Overcrowding ... Quarterly conference calls. Perinatal HIV in the US: Overview ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Getting to Zero:


1
Getting to Zero
  • Eliminating Perinatal HIV Transmission in US
    Hospitals

1
2
What is HRET?
  • Independent, non-profit organization
  • MISSION Transforming healthcare through research
    and education
  • Engages in timely research and education on
    issues of critical interest to hospitals and
    health systems and the community they serve

3
HRETs Focus Areas
  • Enhancing and measuring community health
  • ACHI
  • Preparedness
  • HIV
  • Expanding coverage and access
  • Employer Health Benefits Annual Survey
  • End-of-Life studies
  • ED Overcrowding
  • Improving patient safety and quality of care
  • Co-Management Learning Network
  • Pathways for Medication Safety
  • Simulations for Clinical Training
  • Reducing Disparities in Health Care Treatment

4
HRET and the AHA
  • HRET as affiliated
  • HRET as independent
  • What does this mean for this perinatal HIV
    project?
  • AHA Maternal and Child Health Section
  • 3000 hospital members

5
Materials Development
  • Experience with hospital materials development
  • Community Care Notebook
  • Collaboration Primer
  • Pathways to Medication Safety
  • AHA Member Advisories
  • Uniform Framework for Collection of Racial,
    Ethnic, and Primary Language Data and toolkit

6
Dissemination / Publicity Avenues
  • AHA News Outlets
  • AHA News
  • Biweekly to hospital CEOs
  • Total distribution 21,757
  • AHA News Now
  • Daily news bulletin to senior mgmt.
  • 85 of hospital CEOs read AHA News Now
  • Total distribution 25,244

7
Further Dissemination Tools
  • Mass mailings or email correspondence to all
    hospital CEOs
  • Annual survey data
  • State Hospital Association communication
    contacts
  • Access to state hospital assoc. websites
  • Webpages
  • HospitalConnect.com
  • AHA MCH website
  • HRET website

8
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12
HRET and the CDC
  • Perinatal HIV Transmission Prevention in the
    United States National Organizations Working
    toward Elimination Cooperative Agreement
  • Projected four year project 10/1/03-9/30/07
  • Other current collaboration with the CDC
  • HIV Prevention in the US The Role of Hospitals
  • Hospital-Public Health Preparedness

13
PARTNERSHIP GOAL
Completely eliminate mother-to-child HIV
transmission in the United States
14
National Organizations Working Toward Elimination
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • American College of Obstetricians and
    Gynecologists
  • Association of Maternal and Child Health
    Programs state MCH directors
  • CityMatCH urban MCH, HIV public health
    directors
  • Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Center at UMDNJ AIDS
    education and training
  • AHA Section on Maternal and Child Health

15
HRET Project Activities/Role
  • National survey of hospitals
  • Develop tools and training materials for
    hospitals
  • Establish a panel of experts in maternal and
    child health
  • Expand MCH providers peer networking
    opportunities

16
HRET Team
  • Principal Investigators Mary Pittman, Francie
    Margolin
  • Project Coordinators Kali Stanger, Jennifer
    Reiter
  • Operations Jeanette Lyons
  • Survey Methods Jeremy Pickreign, Heidi
    Whitmore, Samantha Hawkins
  • Communications, liaison with other CDC projects

17
National Advisory Committee
  • Roles and expectations
  • Input on specific materials based on expertise
  • Review of additional materials
  • Advice on dissemination strategies
  • Meet in-person annually
  • Quarterly conference calls

18
Perinatal HIV in the US Overview
  • Public Health successDramatic decrease in
    perinatally acquired AIDS cases
  • Mother-to-child transmission can be prevented
    with intervention
  • Rapid tests provide opportunity to identify
    undiagnosed HIV cases in LD and intervene

19
Opportunities in the Hospital Setting
  • Identify undiagnosed HIV cases
  • Provide intervention in the LD and nursery
    settings
  • Educate patients about HIV transmission and link
    HIV-positive patients to appropriate resources

20
Challenges in the Hospital Setting
  • Testing
  • Legal restrictions
  • Availability of prenatal care test results
  • Counseling and consent
  • Staff resources
  • Reimbursement
  • Cost
  • Confirmatory testing and patient follow-up

21
Challenges in the Hospital Setting, cont.
  • Treatment
  • Availability of medication
  • Appropriate medication counseling
  • Possibility of false positives, risk management
  • Labeling and administering meds while maintaining
    patient privacy

22
Implementation Considerations
  • Counseling
  • Confidentiality
  • Informed consent
  • Opt-out approach
  • Testing
  • Point of care vs. lab-based
  • Preliminary
  • Confirmatory
  • Training
  • Results
  • Interpreting results
  • Preliminary
  • Confirmatory
  • Treatment
  • Guidelines
  • Medication availability
  • Follow-up care

23
Lessons Learned from the Field
  • 6,000-7,000 HIV infected women gave birth in 2000

Office of Inspector General, July 2003
24
Lessons Learned from the Field
  • LD the opportunity for engagement
  • 48-hour window

N 557 deliveries to women without PNC 6 LD
units in Chicago (34 pts missing data)
Information courtesy of Dr. Pat Garcia
25
  • Objectives of MIRIADMother Infant Rapid
    Intervention
  • At Delivery
  • To determine the feasibility and performance of
    rapid HIV testing for women in labor with
    undocumented HIV status
  • To provide timely antiretroviral drug prophylaxis
    to reduce perinatal transmission
  • To facilitate follow-up care for HIV-infected
    women and their infants

26
MIRIAD Findings
  • Consent and counseling can be effectively
    provided in the LD setting
  • Of the 5,374 eligible women on LD, 1,044 (19.4)
    could not be approached by the staff
  • Of the remaining 4,330 women who were approached
    for rapid HIV testing, consent was obtained from
    3,660 (84.5)

Bulterys, et al. JAMA, July 14, 2004-Vol 292, No.
2
27
MIRIAD Findings, cont.
Point-of-care testing returns results more
quickly than laboratory testing.
  • Median turn-around times
  • 9 hospitals using point-of-care testing - 45
    minutes
  • 6 hospitals using 24-hour laboratory - 90
    minutes (plt0.0001)

Bulterys, et al. JAMA, July 14, 2004-Vol 292, No.
2
28
MIRIAD Recommendations and Findings
  • Voluntary HIV testing early in prenatal care is
    the optimum approach to perinatal HIV prevention
    and clinical care of HIV women.
  • In laboring women with undocumented HIV status,
    rapid HIV testing using OraQuick delivered
    accurate and timely test results.
  • Acceptance of HIV testing in labor was high but
    varied by time and day of the week.

Bulterys, et al. JAMA, July 14, 2004-Vol 292, No.
2
29
MIRIAD Findings and Recommendations, cont.
  • Point-of-care testing provided valid test results
    in a timely manner (MMWR 200352866-868).
  • MIRIAD allowed HIV women immediate access to
    intrapartum/neonatal ARV prophylaxis.
  • CDC recommends routine rapid HIV testing in labor
    for women with unknown HIV status using an
    opt-out approach.

Bulterys, et al. JAMA, July 14, 2004-Vol 292, No.
2 CDC Model Protocol
30
HRET National Hospital Survey
  • 2512 hospitals that do gt 300 births/year
  • Sent to CEO to be completed by person most
    knowledgeable about HIV testing in LD
  • E-mail plus follow-up hard copy
  • Response increase strategy
  • National partners, MCH calls, state hospital
    associations
  • 51 response rate

31
Survey Domains
  • Testing policies and practices in
  • Prenatal care
  • Labor and delivery
  • Neonatal care

32
Some Preliminary Conclusions
  • Need to increase universal testing of women
    without documented HIV results
  • Treatment protocols, model policies, training
    materials considered effective
  • Privacy issues and regulations/laws greatest
    perceived barriers to routine testing
  • Cost less often perceived as important barrier

33
More Preliminary Conclusions
  • Need to educate about available tests
  • Need to educate about feasibility of
    point-of-care testing
  • Quality control, regulations, organization
    policies are barriers to point-of-care testing
  • Timeliness facilitator of lab testing

34
Proposed HRET Tools
  • CEO buy-inpacket
  • AHA statements / protocols
  • National training video
  • Slide presentation
  • Hospital implementation manual (year 3)
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