Title: Joseph Bick MD
1Joseph Bick MD Chief Medical Officer California
Medical Facility California Department Of
Corrections and Rehabilitation
2 3(No Transcript)
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8(No Transcript)
9HIV-infected prisoners, U.S. HIV in Prisons,
2004 BOJ Statistics
10States with largest HIV-infected prisoner
populations 2004 BOJ Statistics
11HIV prevalence by gender 2004 BOJ Statistics
12 of population with confirmed AIDS 2004 BOJ
Statistics
13AIDS-related deaths in state prisons 2004 BOJ
Statistics
14Deaths of state prisoners 2004 BOJ Statistics
15HIV testing of prisoners, U.S. 2004 BOJ
Statistics
16HIV testing of inmates 2004 BOJ Statistics
17California Department of Corrections
- 172,000 inmates
- 33 prisons
- HIV prevalence 1.5-2.5 (2500-4300)
- Identified HIV population at any given time
1500-1800
18HIV prevalence, CDCR 1999Ruiz et al, DHS OOA
19CDCR 1758 HIV-infected inmates 5/07
- CMF 530
- CMC 400
- CIM 247
- COR 124
- CCWF 95
- NKSP 65
- SQ 49
- LAC 47
- RJD 46
- SAC 33
- WSP 33
- CCI 25
- CIW 22
- DVI 20
- CRC 8
- SOL 5
- SVSP 3
- ASP 2
- CTF 2
- FOL 1
- KVSP 1
20HIV testing of prisoners, California
- If clinically indicated
- Upon inmate request
- If exposure incident
- By court order
21The Effect of Various Counseling and Testing
Methods on the Rate of HIV Testing Among Male
Prisoners
- J. Baham, J. Gavin, S. Mittal,
- M. Kuniholm, D. Harriss, J. Ruiz, J. Bick
- California Department of Corrections, Department
of Health Services Office of AIDS
22Purpose of Study
- Evaluate how the rate of voluntary HIV testing at
one prison was effected by - different counseling strategies
- offering different testing methodologies
- Evaluate how HIV risk factors, testing history,
and testing attitudes influenced testing method
preferences
23(No Transcript)
24Results
25Choice of Testing Method
- 40 chose oral fluid testing
- Of those who reported fear of needles, 75 chose
oral fluid - 60 chose blood testing
- Some associated oral fluid testing with DNA
collection - No one chose urine testing
- Some associated urine testing with drug testing
26Interview results (n128)
- 23 had never tested for HIV before
- 30 said that they did not know where to get
tested in free community - 35 said that they had wanted to get tested in
past but didnt
27Interview results
- 44 first tested at age gt30, in spite of the fact
that - 37 of testers gave history of IDU
- 57 of testers gave history of gt5 female sex
partners over past ten years
28Conclusions
- 11 counseling of all new arrivals doubled rate
of HIV testing - There is a role for multiple testing modalities
within corrections
29Assembly Bill 66 (Dymally)
- Amends penal code sections 7520 and 7521 and
adds sections 7507 and 7507.5 relating to inmate
HIV testing and disclosure - Requires that HIV testing be offered to all
inmates who will be incarcerated for a period of
at least one year - Testing to be routinely, universally offered
twice within 30-60 days after entry, and at
least 60 days prior to release - Testing would require patient consent and could
be declined (opt-out)
30AB 66 (HIV Testing)
- Requires HIV care and treatment plans, referral
to HIV care and treatment services, and
notification of parole officers - Authorizes notification to spouse or domestic
partner of potential HIV exposure - States that HIV status shall not be used to deny
eligibility for and access to programs that are
otherwise available - Requires the CDCR to report annually to the DHS
and the Legislature on the prevalence HIV
31Impact of AB 66
- 12 reception centers HIV counseling and testing
services for 70,000 new intakes per year - All facilities counseling and testing for
65,000 inmates in the months prior to their
release - Inmates inmates found to be HIV infected will
require additional evaluation by clinical staff - Lab studies, radiographic exams, immunizations,
medications, and specialty referrals
32Impact of AB 66
- Most HIV infected inmates currently housed at a
limited number of facilities - Current housing matrix may need to be revised to
accommodate an increased number of identified HIV
infected prisoners
33Impacts of AB 66
- Will require additional clinicians who are
knowledgeable in the treatment of HIV - Geographic isolation of prisons often makes it
difficult to have an HIV specialist on-site - ? increased use of telemedicine
- All primary providers and nursing personnel will
require continuing education re medication side
effects, drug-drug interactions, opportunistic
infections and other issues related to HIV
infection
34Impacts of AB 66
- Increased pharmaceutical expenditures
- Antiretroviral agents will be needed at all
facilities where HIV testing takes place - Will need to be able to dispense antiretroviral
agents at all facilities at the time of release
35Linkage to care at release
- Uncertainty of the release date or precipitous
release by the courts can challenge effective
discharge planning - AB 66 will lead to the identification of a
significant number of HIV infected inmates
shortly before their scheduled release. - ADAP, SSA, Medicaid applications
36Linkage to the Community
- CDCR currently contracts with community based
organizations to provide HIV associated discharge
planning (Transitional Case Management Program,
TCMP) - TCMP establishes linkages to medical care, and
other re-entry needs such as housing, food,
employment, mental health and substance abuse
treatment and childcare - Will require a significant expansion of the
current TCMP
37Harm Reduction
- Soon after release to the general community,
HIV-infected inmates have a high rate of unsafe
sex practices, especially with their regular
partners - Pre-release risk reduction interventions as part
of transitional care have been found to decrease
high risk behaviors in the months post release
and increase linkage to community resources.
38Impacts of AB 66
- Increased need for mental health services
- Partner counseling and referral services
- HIV/AIDS Case reporting requirements
- Rapid vs. routine testing oral fluid, serum,
urine
39Contact information
- Joseph Bick
- joseph.bick_at_cdcr.ca.gov