Collective Impact & Frameworks for Getting to Zero Shannon Weber | Getting to Zero SF June 16, 2016.

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Presentation transcript:

Collective Impact & Frameworks for Getting to Zero Shannon Weber | Getting to Zero SF June 16, 2016

Collaborationforimpact.com Collective Impact Common Progress Measures Measures that get to the TRUE outcome

Collective Impact is the commitment of a group of actors from different sectors to a common agenda for solving a specific social problem, using a structured form of collaboration.

at-collective-impact

Washington, San Francisco, New York __________________ Frameworks for Getting to Zero

At a Crossroad of Possibility New biomedical treatment and prevention options offer tremendous promise Affordable Care Act and expansion of Medicaid/Medical Ryan White funding & wrap around service model

Common Themes: Early Momentum Strong programs across treatment cascade Success in routine/broad HIV testing Low or no perinatal HIV transmissions Early adoption of syringe access Early PrEP implementation Department of Health involvement Political will

Common Themes: Framework Development Clear vision Defined goals Embrace existing partnerships Prioritizing health equity Infrastructure for initiative New funding for priority areas

Diversity in Approach Community engagement Soliciting stakeholder input Leadership & leadership transitions Expanding partnerships with community, private sector

Opportunities Grappling with stigma Developing metrics; iterative measure of impact Soliciting and integrating broad stakeholder input Honoring, engaging individuals and organizations and the tremendous work already being done Effective solutions for housing, mental health, substance involvement

San Francisco’s Getting to Zero Initiative  Zero new HIV infections  Zero HIV deaths  Zero stigma and discrimination

“This is all interesting, but are you working together?” —Community member How It Began

Getting to Zero SF: What are we? Multi-sector independent consortium. Operates under principles of collective impact: “Commitment of groups from different sectors to a common agenda to solve a specific problem.” Vision: Become the first municipal jurisdiction in the United States to achieve the UNAIDS vision of “Getting to Zero”

San Francisco Numbers

HIV Care Cascade, SF

Strategic priorities | Common Agenda Improve HIV for persons living with disease and at risk in San Francisco –Maintain funding for existing efforts –Achieve success in signature initiatives –Prioritize health equity Secure funding and broad city/private sector support Create innovative programs Exchange best practices with other cities

City-wide coordinated PrEP program Rapid ART start with treatment hubs Linkage- engagement -retention in care Committee for each initiative is developing action plan, metrics and milestones, budget Reducing HIV stigma Committee Led Signature Initiatives | Common Progress Measures

Committee led signature initiatives Co-chairs organize meetings, facilitate work, track metrics Co-chair cross cutting meetings identify mutually reinforcing activities Supported by a Steering Committee liaison Sub-committees in larger initiatives (PrEP, Retention) Quarterly Consortium Meetings All are welcome Hosted by DPH Committee reports track initiative progress Community initiatives/engagement key Getting to Zero SF Infrastructure

G2Z Google Group facilitates broad communication Website: GettingToZeroSF.org Community feedback sessions on website development Committees created page content Integrated calendar highlights events PrEP user group calendar and sign up Blog feature for crowd-sourced information dissemination Getting to Zero SF Infrastructure

PrEP navigators at 3 DPH clinics, CBO awards in Dec 2015 CDC grant: $1.9 million/year x 3 years for PrEP scale-up, outreach with emphasis on people of color and trans Building capacity: – Provider trainings and materials – PrEP integrated into primary care, high capacity at Ward 86, STRUT, Kaiser Building awareness – Launched “Please PrEP Me” to link people with providers – Launching PrEP ambassador program – Training all HIV test counselors Building tracking system to measure impact PrEP

Demonstrated significant improvement in time from diagnosis to viral suppression (from 4.2 months to 1.9 months) – Improves health of treated person – Reduces risk of transmission 2015 Progress – Establish increased counselor capacity for city wide RAPID – Provider awareness – Clinical SOP for rapid start-up of ART – Ensure emergency ART drug supply – Sharing program and practices with other cities – Evaluation of outcomes and refinement of processes RAPID: Rapid ART Program Initiative for HIV Diagnosis

Two half day retreats attended by 40 – mapping gaps in retention and re-engagement in care – prioritizing 2016 activities CDC grant: $958,000/year x 3 years for retention – Create systems to use surveillance data to identify people out of care MAC AIDS: $500,000 (potentially renewable) for retention – Retention navigators at clinics for appt reminders, quick recognition of drop out of care, outreach and wraparound services to re-initiate care Digging into data on overdoses, suicides, then all deaths – Find what is preventable; create strategies to address Retention & Re-Engagement

Recently formed committee, ensuring diversity Planning inventory of current tools, surveys of HIV and PrEP stigma Planning community-wide needs assessment Linkage with national programs (Sero Project) Staffing PrEP, RAPID, and Retention Committees Ending Stigma

: Multisector, volunteer, community based organization, developed strategic plan and action committees for Getting To Zero 2015: Launch of Getting to Zero- Investment of City and private sector; SFDPH Annual Report : Committee led initiatives (action), evaluation and coordination; collaboration locally and globally, broader engagement 2020: 90% reduction in new HIV infections and deaths Roadmap