31 results match your criteria: "New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute[Affiliation]"
Int J STD AIDS
December 2024
New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, Albany, NY, USA.
Background: Bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs) continue to increase in the United States. Despite evidence of the effectiveness of doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis (Doxy-PEP) to prevent STIs, little is known about providers' attitudes and willingness to implement Doxy-PEP.
Methods: An online questionnaire was sent to 575 clinical providers in New York State in September 2022.
J Community Health
December 2024
Division of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Nearly 60% of people with HIV in New York State are over 50 years of age. After town halls and a statewide survey of long-term survivors, older people living with HIV, and their providers, the Quality of Care Program of the AIDS Institute in the New York State Department of Health developed a statewide quality improvement project that aimed to improve screening for functional impairments among people aging with HIV. Thirteen sites reported outcomes of a pilot project using a modification of the World Health Organization's Integrated Care of Older People (ICOPE) intrinsic capacity screen in small scale, short cycle tests of change.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInnov Aging
September 2023
The Center on Aging, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
Background And Objectives: Over 50% of New Yorkers living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) are 50 years old or older, and the emotional and physical consequences of being a long-term survivor are significant. This study aimed to identify the practical needs of long-term survivors and older people with HIV (consumers) in New York State and develop recommendations addressing those needs.
Research Design And Methods: The HIV + Aging/LTS/Perinatally Diagnosed Subcommittee of the Consumer Advisory and Quality Advisory committees in the New York State AIDS Institute used community-based participatory research (CBPR) methods to design a statewide survey about the care needs of consumers in New York State.
Health Equity
September 2023
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, USA.
Background: The New York State (NYS) Department of Health (DOH) AIDS Institute (AI) Clinical Education Initiative (CEI) trains the NYS health care workforce to improve health outcomes related to HIV, sexual health, hepatitis C, and for people who use drugs.
Methods: In 2019, CEI began consistently integrating health equity into CEI activities through a working group that mapped NYS DOH AI health equity competencies for providers onto planned clinical education. We conducted a convergent mixed methods study on qualitative and quantitative participant feedback form (PFF) data to evaluate these competencies between April 1, 2021, and September 30, 2022, and conducted an annual survey of NYS clinician needs in 2021 and 2022.
J Public Health Manag Pract
July 2022
Center for Program Development, Implementation, Research and Evaluation (Drs Tesoriero and O'Grady), Office of Sexual Health and Epidemiology (Dr Yuan), Office of the Medical Director (Ms Newport, Mr Cotroneo, and Dr Gonzalez), and Medicaid Policy and Health Care Financing (Messrs Grisham and Seo), New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, Albany, New York; and Office of the Medical Director, New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, Syracuse, New York (Ms Stevens).
Context: The New York State (NYS) Department of Health AIDS Institute engaged stakeholders across NYS to participate in the state's first "PrEP Aware Week" (PAW). PAW sought to increase the knowledge, interest, and number of PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) prescriptions filled across NYS. PAW activities were designed to be easy to implement, with minimal cost.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAIDS Behav
May 2022
HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies, Columbia University and New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, NY, USA.
Stigma remains a pervasive barrier to Ending the HIV Epidemic (EHE) in New York City (NYC). As part of an EHE implementation science planning process, we mapped multi-level HIV-related stigma-reduction activities, assessed their evidence base, and characterized barriers and facilitators. We interviewed and surveyed a convenience sample of 27 HIV prevention and/or treatment services organizations in NYC, March-August, 2020, using an embedded mixed-methods design.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Public Health Manag Pract
February 2022
Center for Quality Improvement & Innovation (CQII) (Messrs Steinbock and Kolesar and Dr Lee), Office of Program Evaluation and Research (OPER) (Dr Chung and Mr Leung), and Center for Program, Development, Implementation, Research and Evaluation (CPDIRE) (Dr Tesoriero), New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, Albany, New York.
Context: Although viral suppression rates have recently increased among people with HIV, specific populations still experience disparities in health outcomes, a priority in the national response to end the HIV epidemic.
Purpose: The end+disparities ECHO Collaborative, a quality improvement initiative among HIV providers in the United States from June 2018 to December 2019, created virtual communities of practice to measurably increase viral suppression rates in populations disproportionately affected by HIV: men who have sex with men of color, Black/African American and Latina women, youth aged 13 to 24 years, and transgender people.
Methods: Participating Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program-funded providers prioritized their improvement efforts to focus on one target population and joined virtual affinity sessions with other providers focused on that population for guidance by subject matter experts and exchanges with peer providers.
Int J MCH AIDS
May 2020
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Research, University of Rochester, 601 Elmwood Ave, Rochester NY, 14642, USA.
Healthcare providers may be ill-equipped to address the specific care needs of refugee/immigrant (RI) patient populations. We assessed continuing education (CE) training interests among HIV/AIDS, STD, and Hepatitis C (HASH) providers in New York State (NYS), United States, who serve RI patients from Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). An online survey was completed by 156 HASH providers during a three-month period in Spring 2018.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Public Health Manag Pract
February 2022
New York State Department of Health-AIDS Institute, Albany, New York (Mss Johnson and Flavin, Dr Chung, and Messrs Leung and Yuan); and New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, New York, New York (Dr Edelstein).
Context: Gay, bisexual, and men who have sex with men (MSM) are disproportionately affected by the HIV/AIDS epidemic more than any other group. In New York State (NYS) outside of New York City (NYC), MSM accounted for 57% of new HIV/AIDS diagnoses in 2017. HIV/AIDS home testing initiatives have been effective at getting priority populations tested for HIV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOpen Forum Infect Dis
October 2018
New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, New York, New York.
Background: The HIV treatment cascade is a tool for characterizing population-level gaps in HIV care, yet most adaptations of the cascade rely on surveillance data that are ill-suited to drive quality improvement (QI) activities at the facility level. We describe the adaptation of the cascade in health care organizations and report its use by HIV medical providers in New York State (NYS).
Methods: As part of data submissions to the NYS Department of Health, sites that provide HIV medical care in NYS developed cascades using facility-generated data.
Sociol Health Illn
January 2019
Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, City University of New York, New York, NY, USA.
The financial and capacity pressures facing healthcare systems call for new strategies to deliver high-quality, efficient services. 'Coproduction' is a concept gaining recognition as an approach to create patient partnerships that enable better functioning healthcare systems. Yet, this framing obscures coproduction's 'everyday and unavoidable' character, already part of healthcare service delivery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is evidence that practitioners applying quality improvements often adapt the improvement method or the change they are implementing, either unknowingly, or intentionally to fit their service or situation. This has been observed especially in programs seeking to spread or 'scale up' an improvement change to other services. Sometimes their adaptations result in improved outcomes, sometimes they do not, and sometimes they do not have data make this assessment or to describe the adaptation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAIDS Behav
August 2018
Community Health and Social Medicine, Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education/CUNY School of Medicine, City College of New York, City University of New York, New York, NY, USA.
Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) is a cost-effective, but underused HIV prevention strategy. PEP awareness, knowledge, access, and usage was assessed among young men of color who have sex with men (YMSMOC; n = 177), transgender women (TW; n = 182), and cisgender women of color (CWOC; n = 170) in New York City. 59% were aware of PEP: 80% among YMSMOC, 63% among TW and 34% among CWOC (p < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Public Health Manag Pract
April 2018
Division of HIV/STD Epidemiology, Evaluation and Partner Services (Drs Tesoriero, Hart-Malloy, and Anderson and Mss B. L. Johnson, Cukrovany, Moncur, and Bogucki), Division of HIV/STD/HCV Prevention (Ms M. C. Johnson), New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, Albany, New York; and State University of New York, Albany, New York. (Dr Hart-Malloy).
Context: Data to Care (DTC) represents a public health strategy using HIV surveillance data to link persons living with diagnosed HIV infection (PLWDHI) to HIV-related medical care.
Objective: To investigate the feasibility of the DTC approach applied to a Partner Services program serving a geographically diffuse area of New York State.
Design: Disease intervention specialists received training to function as Expanded Partner Services (ExPS) advocates.
J Int Assoc Provid AIDS Care
December 2017
1 New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, New York, NY, USA.
Racial and ethnic disparities in viral load suppression (VLS) have been well documented among people living with HIV (PLWH). The authors hypothesized that a contemporary analytic technique could reveal factors underlying these disparities and provide more explanatory power than broad stereotypes. Classification and regression tree analysis was used to detect factors associated with VLS among 11 419 adult PLWH receiving treatment from 186 New York State HIV clinics in 2013.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHarm Reduct J
November 2015
New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, 90 Church Street, 13th floor, New York, NY, 10007, USA.
This is a brief report on the establishment of a new program in New York State prisons to prepare prisoners to avoid the increased risks of drug overdose death associated with the transition to the community by training them in overdose prevention and making available naloxone, a medication that quickly reverses the effects of an opioid overdose, to all prisoners as they re-enter the community. It is a milestone collaboration in the USA between public health, the correctional system, and a community-based harm reduction program in response to the growth of heroin and opioid analgesic use and related morbidity and mortality, working together to get naloxone into the hands of the people at high risk of overdosing and/or of witnessing an opioid overdose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Knowledge of care practices among clinicians who annually treat <20 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive patients with antiretroviral therapy (ART) is insufficient, despite their number, which is likely to increase given shifting healthcare policies. We analyze the practices, distribution and quality of care provided by low-volume prescribers (LVPs) based on available data sources in New York State.
Methods: We communicated with 1278 (66%) of the LVPs identified through a statewide claims database to determine the circumstances under which they prescribed ART in federal fiscal year 2009.
BMJ Qual Saf
May 2016
BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Background: Rapid scale-up of effective antiretroviral therapy (ART) is required to meet global targets to eliminate new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths. Yet, gaps persist in all nations striving for these targets. In the intervention setting of British Columbia (BC), Canada, where ART is publicly funded, 73% of HIV-diagnosed were on ART in 2011, and only 49% were achieving viral suppression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Qual Health Care
December 2014
Global AIDS Program, CDC, 1600 Clifton Road, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA.
Objective: To demonstrate the effectiveness of quality improvement methods to monitor and improve administration of cotrimoxazole (CTX) prophylaxis to improve health outcomes among adults living with HIV/AIDS in low resource countries.
Design: Program evaluation.
Setting: HIV/AIDS health care facilities in Uganda, Mozambique, Namibia and Haiti.
This study represents the first attempt in the USA to survey pharmacy nonprescription syringe customers at their point of purchase. We surveyed 62 individuals purchasing nonprescription syringes in seven pharmacies located in NYC and Albany, NY, USA. Three quarters of respondents purchased for illicit use, and 36% purchased for medical use, with differences found by race and gender.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the late 1980s, New York State faced projected shortages in the supply of clinicians to meet the burgeoning HIV epidemic. In 1990, the New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute (AI), in collaboration with selected academic, medical center-based Designated AIDS Centers, responded by developing a two-year fellowship training program that provides skills training in the management of HIV disease and the public health aspects of the HIV epidemic. Its primary goal is to increase the number of highly qualified, broadly trained physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and dentists who can assume leadership roles in HIV-related direct care and program administration in New York State.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article describes the development of a statewide program providing continuity of hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment to prisoners upon release to the community. We discussed length of stay as a barrier to treatment with key collaborators; developed protocols, a referral process, and forms; mobilized staff; recruited heath-care facilities to accept referrals; and provided short-term access to HCV medications for inmates upon release. The Hepatitis C Continuity Program, including 70 prisons and 21 health-care facilities, is a resource for as many as 130 inmates eligible to start treatment annually.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acquir Immune Defic Syndr
December 2006
New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, Corning Tower Rm. 315, Albany, NY 12237, USA.
Objectives: To assess rapid and conventional HIV test use, client satisfaction, and counselors' comfort.
Methods: At 61 HIV test sites in New York State, we compared HIV test use during the first 6 months of rapid testing in 2003 with the same time period in 2002. We administered surveys to clients at each site during the first 30 days of rapid testing and to counselors before and after training and after 12 weeks of using rapid tests in the field.
J Public Health Manag Pract
February 2005
Program Planning, Development, and Evaluation, New York State Department of Health/AIDS Institute, Albany, New York 12237-0684, USA.
Prevention of new HIV infections through meeting the prevention needs of HIV-infected persons, known as "prevention with positives," is a national priority. State health departments administer complex HIV/AIDS prevention, health care, and supportive service programs and shape the context for prevention services in their states. This larger context provides opportunities for development and enhancement of HIV prevention interventions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNurse Pract Forum
December 2001
New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute, HIV Clinical Education Initiative, Upstate Medical University, 2419UH, 750 E. Adams Street, Syracuse, NY 13210, USA.
Recent advances in the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease have prompted health care providers to reexamine recommendations for prophylaxis of HIV infection. Parallels with occupational exposure through mucous membrane tissues spur consideration of HIV prophylaxis after sexual assault for several reasons. In both instances, exposure occurs at a single point in time and is unlikely to recur.
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