|
Overview
The HIV Rapid Testing in Non-Clinical Settings Demonstration Project
meets strategy 2 of the Advancing HIV Prevention Initiative: implementing
new models for diagnosing HIV infections outside medical settings. Through
consultation with community-planning groups (CPGs), health departments, and
other local organizations representing populations at high risk for HIV,
community-based organizations (CBOs) will identify and provide rapid HIV
testing to local populations with 1) a high prevalence of HIV; 2) an overall
high risk for HIV infection; and 3) a lesser likelihood of accessing
traditional HIV counseling, testing, and referral services. These
consultations will also help to identify areas, frequented by persons at
higher risk for HIV or by members of populations with high HIV prevalence,
to serve as testing venues. Through active follow-up and provision of
additional services that may reduce barriers to accessing care (e.g.,
provision of transportation services, HIV case manager), CBOs will ensure
that HIV-infected persons are successfully linked with HIV medical care and
psychosocial services.
Goals
Seven CBOs are funded under this demonstration project to conduct HIV
rapid testing in non-clinical, outreach settings. CBOs will be able to focus
on persons who may be less likely to access services in traditional medical
settings and who also are at higher risk for HIV infection.
Goals of this demonstration project are
- to increase knowledge of HIV serostatus among high-risk
racial and ethnic minorities,
- identify potential non-clinical venues for recruiting
persons within the target testing populations, and
- increase and ensure access to treatment and care
services among HIV-infected persons belonging to high-risk minority
groups.
Collaborator Projects
Los Angeles, California, Bienestar Human Services, Inc.,
an agency that serves the Latino community of Los Angeles, is collaborating
with AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) to offer rapid HIV testing in
designated sites throughout Los Angeles County. Target groups include men
who have sex with men (MSM), men who have sex with men and women, injection
drug users, women at sexual risk, and transgenders. Bienestar and AHF will
use separate mobile testing units to access Los Angeles County service
planning areas (SPAs) with the highest seropositivity rates. Other sites to
be targeted include gay and/or transgender nightclubs and bathhouses.
San Francisco, California, Continuum, for its
Tenderloin Neighborhood Testing project, will target African-American and
Latino residents of the Tenderloin area of San Francisco, focusing
particular attention on injection drug users, male-to-female transgender
persons, and the homeless. Continuum will conduct testing in a tent, to be
set up at sites such as public parks, transgender clubs, check disbursement
sites for persons receiving general assistance or Social Security disability
funds, needle exchange sites, and single room occupancy hotels.
Detroit, Michigan, Community Health Awareness Group (CHAG)
will focus on low income and/or homeless African-American injection drug
users, men who have sex with men who also inject drugs (MSM/IDU), and
high-risk heterosexuals (commercial sex workers and/or the sex partners of
IDUs, MSM/IDUs, or persons who are HIV positive) in the Detroit metropolitan
area. CHAG will use a mobile van to offer testing at needle exchange
programs; the 36th District Court (where CHAG provides HIV education for sex
solicitation arrestees); and shelters serving women, the homeless, and
substance-abusing and/or mentally ill persons. CHAG will also offer testing
at fixed sites, such as methadone treatment and needle exchange programs.
Washington, District of Columbia, Whitman Walker Clinic (WWC),
a CBO offering clinical services, will focus on African Americans and
Latinos in the District of Columbia, suburban Maryland, and northern
Virginia. Subpopulations that will be specifically targeted during outreach
sessions include MSM, IDUs, heterosexual men and women, sex workers, and
transgenders. WWC will use two testing teams—an African-American team and
a Latino team—to conduct rapid HIV testing via a mobile testing unit at
venues where the clinic’s specific targeted populations congregate.
Proposed outreach test sites include parks, drug and/or cruising areas, sex
trade areas, low income housing complexes, shelters, corner stores, and sex
clubs. WWC also plans to offer testing at community events and health fairs
that serve the African-American and Latino communities.
Kansas City, Missouri, Kansas City Free Clinic (KCFC),
a CBO offering clinical services, will collaborate with three CBOs (Move UP,
Inc., Imani House, and ReDiscover), the Kansas City Health Department, the
Missouri Department of Health, the clinic’s Community Advisory Board, and
other identified interested community providers to effectively reach at-risk
communities of color. Rapid HIV testing will be offered at the three CBOs
and through a mobile testing unit. All rapid testing services will be
provided in street, neighborhood, and community agency locations where
high-risk minorities congregate. Proposed outreach sites to be accessed by
the mobile testing unit include parks, areas of high-volume prostitution,
homeless shelters, motels, and adult movie theaters.
Boston, Massachusetts, Health Services Partnership of
Dorchester (HSP—made up of Dorchester House Multi-Service Center and
Codman Square Health Center), a CBO offering clinical
services, will target persons of color living in Dorchester, Mattapan, and
Roxbury for rapid HIV testing. HSP will focus on injection drug users, sex
partners of HIV-infected persons (typically women of color), adolescents,
and sexually active members of resident immigrant and refugee communities
from countries with a high prevalence of HIV/AIDS. HSP will conduct testing
at both fixed and mobile outreach sites. Fixed sites include agencies that
serve Haitian and Vietnamese populations, and shelters serving women and the
homeless. Testing will be offered via a mobile testing unit at outreach
sites, including parking lots, parks, and areas frequented by sex workers,
MSM, and IDUs. In addition, HSP will collaborate with other community
agencies to recruit high-risk minorities for testing at Dorchester House
Multi-Service Center or Codman Square Health Center. Both centers will offer
rapid HIV testing to walk-in clients and to those referred by other
agencies.
Chicago, Illinois, The Night Ministry (TNM) is
a non-profit, non-denominational service organization serving homeless
adults and youth, working poor adults, and uninsured and underinsured
persons seeking medical assistance. For the rapid HIV testing project, TNM
will focus on homeless youth and adults; the uninsured; persons with alcohol
or substance abuse issues; women and men who exchange sex for money, drugs,
or survival; and other at-risk populations. TNM will offer testing via a
mobile testing unit at public parks, street corners, and other areas where
these persons congregate, as well as at health fairs and local colleges.
Fixed testing sites include youth and homeless shelters, a transitional
living program for young single mothers, and a teen health center.
Project Milestones
- Funding announcement: April 2003
- Selection of contractors: June 2003
- Investigator meetings: November 2003; possible second
meeting in fall 2004
- Rapid test implementation: April 2004–May 2004
- Site visits: November 2003–February 2004 for
implementation site visits; other site visits will be planned as needed.
Data Collection
The project will use CDC-supplied data forms to collect quantitative data
(i.e., demographics, risk, testing history, information on the rapid test,
confirmatory testing, and referrals to medical care and other services) on
all persons tested through the project. Currently, these are hard-copy
forms. An Access database is under development and will soon be provided to
the sites along with laptops for data entry in the field. Qualitative data
will be collected from CBOs through focus groups and/or follow-up interviews
with clients who have been served.
Results to Date
CBOs initiated data collection in May and June 2004. Continuum in San
Francisco, CA, was the first site to implement rapid HIV testing for the
project. Continuum identified four persons with reactive rapid HIV test
results during the first week of testing. Similarly, The Night Ministry
found its first HIV-positive person after conducting fewer than 30 tests.
The number of rapid HIV tests performed by each CBO and the number of
confirmed positive HIV tests are included in the following table.
CBO |
Number of rapid HIV
tests performed (as of
September 30, 2004) |
Number of confirmed
positive rapid HIV tests* |
Bienestar Human Services, Inc. & AIDS Healthcare Foundation |
923 |
20 |
Community Health Awareness Group |
702 |
17 |
Continuum |
578 |
17 |
Health Services Partnership of Dorchester |
1576 |
20 |
Kansas City Free Clinic |
354 |
2 |
The Night Ministry |
638 |
12 |
Whitman Walker Clinic |
369 |
2 |
*Only those HIV-positive tests assumed to be new positives (not previously diagnosed) are included in this table.
In addition to quantitative data, CBOs have provided valuable information regarding operational issues and ideal methods for developing and implementing similar programs. This type of information is particularly useful because one of the goals of these demonstration projects is to develop best practices guidelines for use by other organizations.
|