Title: HIV Testing Just Got A Lot Easier:
1HIV Testing Just Got A Lot Easier Putting ACTS
into Action
AETC NRC Training Exchange May 23, 2006 Donna
Futterman, MD Stephen Stafford
2Todays Agenda
- The Tipping Point for Routine HIV Testing
- The Evolution / Intelligent Design of HIV CT
- Results from ACTS in Action
- A Users Guide to the ACTS Approach Tools
- ACTS Role Play
- Questions Discussion
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3Unfinished Business
- HIV is the worst epidemic in history
- 40,000 new cases each year 25-50 among youth
- 1 in 4 (?300,000) HIV Americans dont know
theyre infected - 80 of young HIV gay and bisexual men didnt
know their status - 41 of those diagnosed HIV were diagnosed with
AIDS within one year of their positive HIV test
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4Taking Care of Business
- Case finding hasnt kept up with treatment
advances - Patients overwhelmingly accept HIV testing when a
provider recommends it - The mobilization for prenatal testing missed a
golden opportunity to routinize screening for
all, but it remains a successful model for how to
proceed
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5Routine Testing The Benefits
- REDUCES HIV TRANSMISSION
- HIV people who know their status reduce
high-risk sex by about 50 - Lower viral loads from ARVs also reduce Tx
- PROLONGS LIFE
- HIV treatment can increase survival by many years
and improve quality of life
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6Routine Testing Best Practice
- 2003, CDC issues Advancing HIV Prevention New
Strategies for a Changing Epidemic calling for
routine testing in communities with 1 HIV
prevalence - 2005, routing testing found cost/care effective
in settings with .05 HIV prevalence - CDC, HRSA DOHs working toward routine testing
by streamlining counseling consent - ACTS makes provider-delivered routine testing
feasible in various care settings
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7Keeping Up with the Times
- 1986
- Environment
- No effective treatment
- Discrimination against those infected MSM, IDU,
immigrants sex workers - Policy
- CT regulations often written to limit testing
- mandated counseling
- written consent
- 2006
- Environment
- Many effective treatments
- HIV discrimination reduced at-risk populations
have changed - Policy
- CT regulations remain largely unchanged
- separates CT from routine medical care
- prevention value of pre-test counseling minimal
-
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8Why Dont Providers Routinely Test?
- 2001 qualitative research investigated HCP
motivators and barriers impacting HIV testing of
adolescents - Commissioned by AAP, conducted by professional
qualitative research firm - Interviewed 55 Bronx-based providers and
administrators in public and private settings - Key findings informed ACTS initiative
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9Not Enough Time,Not Enough Experience,Not
Aware of Risk
- Found that conventional HIV testing is
- time-intensive
- specialized
- stigmatized
- separated from routine care
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10Its Time for a Paradigm Shift! HIV
testing has become such a huge obstacle that many
providers and patients prefer to sail around it.
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11- The Provider Imperative
- Less Referring, More Screening
- YOU can help solve the solvable problem of
finding the 300K unidentified HIV patients - YOU can provide links to effective prevention
counseling - YOU can engage HIV patients into early care
- YOU are an essential player in the team that will
meet public health HIV/AIDS goals
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12Fast Facts on ACTS
- ACTS is a concise, comprehensive system that
makes provider-delivered HIV testing feasible in
clinical care settings - Provides instruction tools for making
operational and clinical practice changes - Meets CDC and DOH testing requirements
- Condenses 45-minute process to 5-10 minutes
- Allows for better allocation of counseling
resources
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13ACTS in ACTIONResults from a Randomized Control
Trial
- 10 Bronx clinics randomized to receive ACTS rapid
counseling in late 2004 - Divided into 5 ACTS Sites 5 Control Sites
- Data collected on HIV testing rates
- Eligible patients included those age 15-64,
non-maternity patients
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14ACTS in ACTIONACTS Sites Double HIV Testing
Rates
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15Elements of the ACTS System
- Meeting with the HIV coordinator, clinic
administrator and medical director to develop
implementation plan - Academic detailing session(s) to train clinic
staff on ACTS - ACTS manual and toolkit containing information,
materials and resources for providers, clinic
staff and patients -
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16Laying the Foundation for ACTS with Key Staff
- Address Philosophical Barriers
- Skepticism about patients HIV risk
- Other health problems viewed as priority
- Concerns about loss of prevention
- Address Logistical Barriers
- Which staff will test
- Documentation consent forms
- Patient flow results follow-up
- Billing issues
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17ACTS Site Prep Checklist
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18Training Staff to Utilize ACTS
- Academic Detailing
- Provider-led training
- Catered
- Follow-up trainings with new staff
- Ongoing Support
- Regular meetings with key staff to problem-solve
barriers - Ongoing data reporting to all staff via meetings
and newsletters
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19ACTS Materials
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20Its All in the Manual
Part I ACTS HIV Counseling and Testing
System ACTS Pocket Card Talking Points for
Translating ACTS into Action Essential
Forms Patient Education Part II ACTS
Backgrounders Chapter 1 HIV Counseling
Delivering Results Chapter 2 HIV Testing
Procedures Chapter 3 Working with Special
Populations Chapter 4 Prevention
Essentials Chapter 5 The ACTS Imperative Part
III - Resources
concise
comprehensive
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21The Pocket Guide to ACTS
21
22ACTS Talking Points
22
23Forms
23
24ACTS Chart Stickers
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25ACTS Update Newsletter
25
26Patient HIV Info Brochures
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27The Deal
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28The A in ACTS
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29Talking Points Page 10 ACTS PRE Screen Page 24
Reality-Based Prevention Counseling Page 78
Transmission Basics The Risk Continuum
ConceptPage 75
Taking a Sexual and Drug Use History Page 77
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30The C in ACTS
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31The T in ACTS
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32The S in ACTS
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33Talking Points Delivering HIV Results
- Give results and allow time to process
- Rapid
- Conventional
- Discuss meaning of results
- Provide support
- Link to care
- Discuss prevention
- Review HIV reporting and partner notification
options - Screen each name for domestic violence risk
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34Putting ACTS into ACTIONWho Benefits?
- Your Patients
- Your Practice
- Do what many providers cant / wont do
- Bill for additional counseling visit
- Participate in national pilot intervention
- Our Community
- Help us fine-tune ACTS understand how it works
- Do your part to make ACTS a model for others
- Be on record as having solved this problem!
- Public Health
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35ACTS in ACTIONFuture Plans for ACTS
- Continued regional national dissemination
- Presentation of ACTS at 2006 International AIDS
Conference Ryan White Clinical Care Conference
in August - Expansion of ACTS to Bronx control sites in
September 2006 - Ongoing implementation
- CDC-sponsored South Africa Youth Clinics
- Pediatric ER at Montefiore
- National Assembly on School-Based Health Care
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36Hearing ACTS in Action
- Alex
- 36 year old white male
- Engaged to be married in 6 months
- Visiting for routine BP check-up
- Keisha
- 40 year old African American woman
- Divorced mother of 3, dating 1 man exclusively
- Visiting for a vaginal infection
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37Questions Discussion
37
38Take a few moments toevaluate this
presentation.Visithttp//www.aidsetc.org/aidset
c?pagecf-acts-evalto quickly submit your
comments
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39Contact Us / Order Materials
Donna Futterman, MD DFutterman_at_AdolescentAIDS.org
Stephen Stafford StephenS_at_AdolescentAIDS.org Mic
helle Lyle, MPH MLyle_at_AdolescentAIDS.org Adolesce
nt AIDS Program Childrens Hospital at
Montefiore 718-882-0232 AdolescentAIDS.org 5.23.0
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