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Community Capacity Building for HIV Vaccine Research, Development,

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Marc-Andr LeBlanc & David Thompson ... 6. One day meeting to critique the plan and propose amendments. 7. Revision of the draft plan ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community Capacity Building for HIV Vaccine Research, Development,


1
Community Capacity Building for HIV Vaccine
Research, Development, Delivery in Canada
  • Preliminary results from the CAS - CANVAC Joint
    Project.
  • Ottawa Roundtable on HIV Vaccines
  • Ottawa, Dec. 4,5, 2003.
  • Marc-André LeBlanc David Thompson

2
Community Capacity Building for HIV Vaccine
Research, Development, Delivery in Canada
  • Partners
  • CANVAC
  • Canadian Network for Vaccines and
    Immunotherapeutics
  • CAS
  • Canadian AIDS Society / Society Canadienne du
    sida.

3
Research Objectives
  • To evaluate levels of general knowledge about
    vaccines and about vaccine R, D, D, among key
    informants in Cancer, HCV and HIV advocacy
    groups.
  • To unveil some initial indications of What might
    a strategic plan for community capacity building
    around HIV, HCV Cancer vaccines look like?

4
Research Objectives (2)
  • To stimulate discussion at a national level re
    long-term strategic capacity building for vaccine
    preparedness in concerned affected communities
    in Canada.
  • To prospectively explore how advocates for R,D,D
    in Cancer, Hepatitis C and HIV might collaborate
    in this effort.

5
What do we mean by capacity building? (1)
  • Raising awareness understanding at different
    levels in affected communities
  • 1. Primordially at the level of the
    interconnectedness of vaccine R,D,D with other
    fields of HIV community work.
  • Between vaccines other methods of HIV
    prevention (behavioural psycho-social
    interventions)
  • Between vaccine R,D, D and treatment R,D,D and
    treatment advocacy

6
What do we mean by capacity building? (2)
  • Between Canadian efforts on the domestic on the
    international scene (global north the global
    south).
  • 2. Maintaining a level of scientific, ethical
    political knowledge inquiry (and enthusiasm)
    within communities, translating disseminating
    it.

7
What do we mean by capacity building? (3)
  • Building advocacy initiatives around vaccine
    development, research and delivery
  • Preparing communities for clinical trials ???
  • Anticipating the impact of new prevention
    technologies on HIV prevention treatment

8
Methodology (1)
  • 1. Literature review
  • Qualitative semi-structured research interviews
    with key-informants in community based
    organisations
  • Organisations engaged in patient advocacy, health
    promotion education- prevention).
  • Executive Directors, Education-prevention
    Co-ordinators, Specialized Activists or their
    designates.

9
Methodology (2)
  • 3. Interviews are taped transcribed
  • 4. Analysis of transcripts
  • Coding of the data
  • Commonalities Silences
  • Quotable Quotes
  • 5. Preparation of a draft strategic plan for
    capacity building

10
Methodology (3)
  • 6. One day meeting to critique the plan and
    propose amendments
  • 7. Revision of the draft plan
  • 8. Circulation of report to participants
    partners

11
Methodology - Interviews
  • 26 Interviews With Key Informants
  • HIV 20 (7)
  • HCV 08
  • CANCER 05 (1)
  • Total interviews 26
  • Notes
  • Groups working in both HIV HCV were counted
    twice.
  • The figures in brackets are interviews yet to
    take place.
  • The analysis of the data from the interviews with
    informants from cancer patient advocacy groups
    has not yet begun.

12
Methodology - Interviews (2)
  • International 02
  • National 10 (2)
  • Provincial/Interprovincal 04 (2)
  • Local/Regional 12 (4)
  • Note Figures in brackets indicate interviews
    yet to be completed.

13
Methodology Interviews (3) Local Regional NGOs
  • British Columbia 7
  • Prairies 1 (1)
  • Ontario 3 (1)
  • Québec 3 (2)
  • Atlantic 0
  • Territories 1
  • Note Several of the national organisations
    are based in Ontario
  • In one of the Ontario interviews, the tape was
    inaudible but the key informant will be invited
    to the group meeting.

14
Methodology - Interviews (4)
  • Aboriginal Clientele 4 (2)
  • Ethno-cultural 1 (1)

15
Coding the Data
  • What are the pre-requisites?
  • What are the assumptions?
  • Where are the silences?
  • What are the challenges of engaging community on
    a very long-term effort?

16
Coding the Data
  • How does this fit on a prevention-care-support-tre
    atment continuum?
  • What leadership is needed?
  • What types of capacity are needed?
  • How can we build on existing efforts?

17
Community capacity building around vaccines
  • Some Preliminary Results

18
What are the pre-requisites?
  • Improved funding to ASOs
  • Without this, the capacity to conduct coherent,
    sustained advocacy on a long-term issue such as
    vaccine R,D,D is lost.
  • Development of a long-term culture within some
    branch(es) of the HIV community movement.

19
What are the pre-requisites?
  • A Canadian Strategy on Hepatitis C to ensure
    survival of an effective, renewable network of
    community groups and advocates.
  • Funding and support for an advocacy approach to
    cancer prevention in Canada.

20
What are the assumptions?
  • The overwhelming majority believe that the
    clinical research for HIV vaccines will be done
    in the north that Canada will have some role to
    play hosting clinical trial sites.
  • Only the key informants drawn from national AIDS
    policy advocacy NGOs are otherwise informed.

21
What are the basic assumptions understandings?
  • Equality
  • Key informants believe that they will be
    consulted and have a role to play in aspects of
    clinical research in decisions concerning
    vaccine delivery.
  • Human Rights
  • Combating vaccine related stigma discrimination.

22
What are the basic assumptions understandings?
  • Specific populations will need specific
    approaches. Community NGOs are well placed to
    identify these.
  • However not all NGOs are necessarily suited as
    sites for the promotion or conduct of clinical
    research nor vaccination.
  • Ethnocultural communities Aboriginal
    communities have gatekeepers who must be included
    in the process.

23
What are the basic assumptions understandings?
  • With comprehended information, some (many) people
    in the most marginalised HIV-vulnerable
    communities will come forward for clinical
    research ultimately for vaccine delivery.

24
What are the basic assumptions understandings?
  • That governments and public health agencies will
    assume leadership in promoting vaccine R,D, D
    and will support protect communities in the
    process.

25
Where are the silences?
  • Often people cannot imagine the resources they
    would need in order to be able to conduct
    long-term vaccine preparedness advocacy work.
  • A surprising number of key informants had no
    detailed knowledge of whom is conducting adult
    vaccination in HIV affected communities in their
    city.
  • A significant minority however were engaged in
    front line vaccination partnerships with public
    health nurses.

26
Where are the silences?
  • Key informants from outside of the three large
    metropolitan cities Ottawa, had lower
    knowledge of HIV vaccine research.
  • Very few informants are aware of CANVAC

27
What are the challenges of engaging community on
a very long-term effort?
  • Their immediate needs are so pressing and they
    are so under-resourced that vaccine R,D, D
    seems remote advocacy unattainable.

28
What are the challenges of engaging community on
a very long-term effort?
  • Its very hard when approached with something
    that seems remote and really not connected to the
    day to day realities of the people were working
    with, it isnt very obvious that we should get
    involved in it. Or that we should devote
    resources to it at the expense of something
    thats more immediate and concrete for us.

29
What are the challenges of engaging community on
a very long-term effort?
  • In a context where there may be very few or no
    vaccine clinical trials in Canada, building
    capacity and maintaining interest in the
    community may be particularly challenging, but
    not impossible.
  • Need to balance enthusiasm against pragmatism re
    delays expectations.

30
What are the challenges of engaging community on
a very long-term effort?
  • The politics of research are often that
    countries where the research is being done, and
    certainly where the research is successful, will
    be the countries that get faster access to the
    vaccine.

31
What are the challenges of engaging community on
a very long-term effort?
  • Theoretically, I dont care whether the
    research for AIDS drugs is done here or
    overseas. But practically, Im desparate to have
    those trials in Canada, because I know I can get
    some compassionate access. I can get it more
    easily through the special access program in
    Canada, and I can get people on these drugs as a
    trial.

32
How does this fit on the prevention-care-support
continuum?
  • The vast majority of key informants from HIV
    community groups support an approach that links
    HIV vaccine advocacy to work in prevention
    treatment.

33
What leadership is needed?
  • A tiered, complementary and parallel approach to
    leadership
  • Governments public health
  • National NGOs involved in coalition leadership
    policy analysis.
  • Grass-roots community leadership by committed
    militants with a passion for issues concerning
    vaccine R,D, D.

34
What leadership is needed?
  • Separate entity (committee, coalition, action
    group) to deal with the specific issues. ???
  • Involvement / partnership with vaccine community
    interests in the global south.

35
What types of capacity are needed?
  • Network Building
  • Capacities (and resources) are needed to build a
    network of community stakeholders define roles
    and responsibilities.

36
What types of capacity are needed?
  • Knowledge Information management
  • Information resources - a clear, unbiased,
    independent source of information.
  • Developing vaccine literacy in HIV affected
    communities.
  • Networks for distribution
  • Re Present future vaccines keeping things in
    perspective

37
What types of capacity are needed?
  • Communications Skills
  • Develop a communications plan
  • Maintain ongoing interest in present future
    adult vaccines, (preventive therapeutic) in
    what is essentially a long-term uncertain
    venture
  • Appeal to persons living with and vulnerable to
    HIV

38
What types of capacity are needed?
  • Advocacy
  • Pre-requisite resources translation of
    information.
  • Pre-requisite development of a network of
    community actors galvanized around HIV vaccine
    issues.
  • Partnership with NGOs in the global south
  • Ability to advocate for ethical vaccine research
    and delivery at home abroad.
  • Planning for impact on prevention

39
What types of capacity are needed?
  • Capacity to stay the course over the long run.
  • If given the appropriate resources information,
    the overwhelming majority of informants felt they
    would be able to communicate vaccine information
    to their constituencies engage in competent
    advocacy.

40
How can we build on existing efforts?
  • HIV NGOs affected communities are familiar
    with clinical trials and associated concepts of
    risk, adverse events, efficacy access.
  • Treatment advocacy can deal with existing adult
    vaccines with the same interest fervor that
    applies to treatments of OIs.

41
What partnerships are needed?
  • Within the network
  • CAS/SCS
  • Legal Network
  • CTN
  • CTAC
  • CATIE
  • Clearing House
  • ICASO
  • ICAD
  • Global Network of People Living with HIVAIDS
  • MAGNET

42
What partnerships are needed?
  • With vaccinators conducting adult vaccinations
  • With gatekeepers, peer educators in HIV affected
    and vulnerable communities
  • In every community there are First Nations
    people who are concerned about these issues. But
    whether the leadership of a community is there
    ... thats what makes the difference.

43
Possible partnerships?
  • The place of traditional medicines and healing in
    relation to vaccine research needs to be
    considered in many contexts, including Aboriginal
    communities, ethnocultural communities, and among
    people living with HCV.
  • Coalition with cancer HCV patient advocacy
    groups poses cultural differences that will need
    to be overcome.

44
What partnerships are needed?
  • With people advocating for microbicide R,D, D.
  • With researchers
  • With government

45
Possible partnerships?
  • Overwhelming understanding that Pharma is
    concerned with money - and only money.
  • But there may be a convergence of interests.
  • Dialogue is possible but community requires a
    safe space.
  • Incentives, regulations and contractual
    obligations will have to be put into place to tip
    market forces to favour vaccine R,D, D.

46
What partnerships are needed?
  • With Researchers Industry
  • A considerable cultural gap is perceived to exist
    between the research community HIV affected
    communities.
  • Both have the desire to work with each other,
    need each other, and have a convergence of some
    important interests.

47
What partnerships are needed?
  • There is a widespread perception particularly
    among advocates for
  • IDU HCV patients
  • Aboriginals living with HIV and
  • Persons of colour with HIV
  • that pervasive direct and systemic
    discrimination exists within medical and research
    services offered to marginalised Canadians -
    particularly those who are co-infected with HIV
    HCV.

48
Obstacles and challenges
  • The dire situation of multiply marginalised
    people who are living with, affected by or
    vulnerable to HIV
  • those communities who could probably benefit
    the most are, in some cases, the ones for which
    the vaccine would be lowest on the priority list
  • The uncertain time frame of vaccine development

49
Obstacles and challenges
  • Perceived competition in an environment where
    resources are scarce
  • North vs.South
  • Treatment vs. Prevention
  • Vaccines vs Existing preventive behvioural
    interventions
  • Therapeutic vs. Preventive vaccines
  • Cancer vs AIDS vs HCV funding.
  • Although the interviews occasionally revealed
    evidence of these tensions, the majority of
    informants favoured a model recognising the
    synergies.

50
Obstacles and challenges
  • Inter-community stigma,fear discrimination.
  • Intra-community stigma discrimination
  • Information overload it must be personally
    relevant to stick.

51
Whats next?
  • Continue literature review
  • Complete interviews for a more representative
    sample
  • Speak with the CANVAC secretariat researchers
  • Complete draft capacity-building strategy
    document
  • Face-to-Face Meeting
  • Revise document and disseminate

52
Some closing thoughts
  • Development of the communities capacities to
  • Inform policy, evaluate influence the content
    of PPPs
  • Inform policy and participate in public health
    decision making re vaccine research delivery.
  • Support advocate for funding for more better
    vaccine research in the global north in the
    global south.

53
Some closing thoughts
  • Develop a coherent community advocacy concerning
    issues of stigma discrimination related to
    participation in clinical trials vaccination
    and arising in decisions concerning access to
    both.
  • Provide a community commentary and perspective
    advocating for the most effective use of Canadian
    resources in the search for HIV vaccines.
  • Elaborate community requirements from clinical
    research
  • Monitor clinical research related community
    benefits

54
Some closing thoughts
  • Be able to spring into action according to
    carefully drafted plans with assigned roles
    responsibilities whenever a clinical trial comes
    to Canada whenever proof of concept is
    announced.
  • Partner with communities in the global south in a
    meaningful way at every step of vaccine R, D,
    D.
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