SUSA17 - Better Data, Better Programmes: How Implementation Science is Transforming the HIV Response for Key Populations Dr. Cameron Wolf, USAID Dr. Trista.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
International Security Security UNAIDS INITIATIVE ON HIV/AIDS AND SECURITY NationalSecurityNationalSecurityHumanitarianResponseHumanitarianResponse In.
Advertisements

No one left behind: Increased coverage, better programmes and maximum impact for key populations WHO Consolidated Guidelines on HIV Prevention, Diagnosis,
The U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief The Evolving HIV Prevention Strategy for IDUs in PEPFAR Amb. Eric Goosby US Global AIDS Coordinator.
UNAIDS, Regional Support Team, Eastern and Southern Africa
Comprehensive HIV Prevention Strategies for Most at Risk Populations (MARPs) Anne Goldzier Thomas, Ph.D. US Department of Defense/PEPFAR Ethiopia National.
Regional Videoconference Addressing Stigma and Discrimination of HIV/AIDS in Africa Thursday, April 2, 2009 UNAIDS Perspective Susan Timberlake, Senior.
Key Affected Populations in Asia: Where are we and what is the way forward? Dr. Sai Subhasree Raghavan SAATHII, India Governing Council Member, IAS.
United Republic of Tanzania Ministry of Health & Social Welfare MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL WELFARE NATIONAL AIDS CONTROL PROGRAM HIV CARE AND TREATMENT.
LINKAGES Across the Continuum of HIV Services for Key Populations Affected by HIV Kevin Osborne, LINKAGES Project Director Interagency Working Group (IAWG)
“A hora é agora”- The Time is Now: HIVST to reach men who have sex with men in Brazil” Raquel B. De Boni, MD, PhD PI: Beatriz Grinsztejn, MD, PhD National.
VMMC Age and Geographic Prioritization Dr. Katharine Kripke Avenir Health Satellite Session AIDS 2016: Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) as Primary.
Joint Global Fund/PEPFAR Key Population HIV Cascade Assessments
Inter Parliamentary Union on HIV and AIDS 22 January 2008
Outline The Global Fund Strategy emphasizes the Key Populations
Conflict of Interest “No conflicts of interest to declare”.
Sindy Matse Key Populations National Coordinator SNAP Swaziland
How differentiated care supports “Tx all” and Dr
20:20 Vision Making new and old money work better
Jennifer Sherwood amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research
Community-Led and Online Strategies for Testing, Treatment and PrEP among MSM and Transgender Persons in Thailand Nittaya Phanuphak, MD, PhD Thai Red.
TransIT The Transgender Implementation Tool for the WHO key population guidelines.
LINKAGES Across the Continuum of HIV Services for Key Populations Affected by HIV July 2016 Steeve LAGUERRE LINKAGES-HAITI COP.
Opportunities and prospects.
Funding stigma reduction for key populations: innovation and actions
Repairing HIV service cascades that leak: Key population communities taking the lead Johan Hugo 18 July 2016.
Current harm reduction program at outreach
LIGHTHOUSE SOCIAL ENTERPRISE AND G-LINK VIETNAM
Hiv risk perception among transgender women in community-based clinics in thailand Reshmie Ramautarsing1, Thitiyanan Nakpor2, Rena Janamuaysook1, Supabhorn.
Getting to the second 90 in adolescent HIV: What is needed
Incorporating transition considerations into the new Global Fund funding cycle Mauro Guarinieri Senior Technical Adviser, Community Responses and Drug.
Key Affected Populations
Access Equity in Prisons in Africa A CALL FOR ACTION
Dr. R. Cameron Wolf Senior HIV/AIDS Advisor for Key Populations
Testing and linking different key population groups in Ukraine
Time to Focus: Doing Things Better and Differently for Transgender People Rena Janamnuaysook Thai Red Cross AIDS Research Centre, USAID LINKAGES, Thailand.
Double-sided HIV Cascades for Key Populations
PrEP and Key populations: WHO guidelines & recommendations
What does it take to reach the people who need it most?
“Time to Focus: Doing things better and differently for key populations” Partner notification HIV Self Testing and Social Network Testing Dr Irene.
Prioritizing adolescents and young people in Kenya
HIV Prevention 2.0 (HP2): Achieving an AIDS-Free Generation in Senegal
Outline Session 7:00 FRSA0701 Welcome and introductions : WHO general approach to cascade analysis framework : From Cascade Analysis to Action  Jesus M.
Delivering a Comprehensive Package of HIV Prevention, Care, and Treatment Services for Key Populations: FHI 360 LINKAGES Malawi Project Gift Kamanga,
Why HIV prevention programs succeed or fail
MoH leading the design and scale up of PrEP in eswatini
Nittaya Phanuphak, MD, PhD 
THAC0204 Integrated Gender Affirmative Hormone Treatment Services Improve Access to and Retention in HIV Testing, Syphilis Testing, and PrEP Service Uptake.
Parinita Bhattacharjee, Giuliana J. Morales, Timothy M
Patrick Brenny, UNAIDS RST-WCA
National Department of Health: South Africa
Key population-led health services (KP-LHS) critical to PrEP introduction among men who have sex with men (MSM) and transgender women (TGW) in Thailand.
USAID STRENGTHENING THE CARE CONTINUUM PROJECT (The Care Continuum)
Update on HIV and TB situation in SEAR Dr Mukta Sharma RA HIV TB HEP WHO SEARO Global Fund , South-East Asia Constituency Meeting, April 2018,
Amsterdam, Netherlands 26 July 2018
(Hyper)Linkages: On-line MSM community based approaches for PrEP, HIV self-testing, treatment adherence and more!
Petchsri Sirinirund Advisor to HIV/AIDS Policy and Programme
Key Affected Populations
Rachel Sturke, PhD Deputy Director and Senior Scientist
Multi-level barriers to antiretroviral therapy initiation, retention, and adherence for female sex workers living with HIV in South Africa C. Comins, L.
A review of research, policy and programming
Implementation Experiences & Insights from the Scale-Up of an HIV Assisted Partner Notification Intervention in Central Asia Kristen M. Little, Maxim Kan,
The disconnect between individual-level and population-level HIV prevention benefits of antiretroviral treatment  Stefan Baral, MD, Amrita Rao, ScM, Patrick.
2025 AIDS targets Technical meeting on prevention
Target-Setting, Impact and Resource Needs
Dismas Gashobotse, MD FHI 360/LINKAGES, Burundi
Reshmie Ramautarsing, M.D., Ph.D.
The Epidemic in Key Populations in Zimbabwe
How are programmes specifically designed using collected data?
Transgender-Led Social Media Interventions Effectively Identify Transgender Women at Substantial Risk of HIV Acquisition and Successfully Link to HIV Prevention,
A pathway to policy commitment for sustainability of a key population-led health services model in Thailand Dr. Preecha Prempree Deputy Director-General,
Presentation transcript:

SUSA17 - Better Data, Better Programmes: How Implementation Science is Transforming the HIV Response for Key Populations Dr. Cameron Wolf, USAID Dr. Trista Bingham, CDC July 23, 2017

Implementation Science studies Focus of awards: Identify barriers/facilitators at each stage of HIV cascade Characterize current status of HIV services for KPs Compare programmatic strategies to reach and improve HIV services and outcomes at different stages of the cascade Determine costs of service delivery models Total of $15M awarded for KPIS + other centrally funded studies; ~$3M for amfAR’s GMT Initiative studies Multi-year awards at different stages of implementation

Features of Key Populations Implementation Science Country KP Type Qual Methods HIV Cascade Outcomes* Compare Service Delivery Strategies Cost Analysis Brazil MSM X R, T, L Burma MSM, TG R, T, L, S Ghana FSW, MSM R, T, L, T Guatemala Tx, S Kenya FSW T, L, Tx Kyrgyz Republic PWID T, L, Tx (via NSP) Peru TG Senegal MSM, FSW R, T, L, Tx, S South Africa Tanzania Tx, S (via MAT) Thailand** Thailand Ukraine L, Tx, S * R=Reach; T=Test; L=Link; Tx=Treat; S=Suppress; ** Joint USAID/CDC

amfAR CDC USAID All Ukraine Kyrgyzstan Burma Senegal Guatemala Ghana South Africa Kenya Tanzania Kyrgyzstan Guatemala Ukraine Thailand Brazil Ghana Peru Senegal Burma amfAR CDC USAID All

Putting KPs in the center of their response Key Themes Structural Barriers and the importance of addressing stigma and discrimination Putting KPs in the center of their response Options (who, what, where, when) for HIV services Community/peer-led services, PrEP, integrating with gender-affirming care, self-testing, online services to maximize technology and privacy Partnerships

Acknowledgements Trista Bingham, CDC Michael Cowing, amfAR Hally Mahler, FHI360 / LINKAGES Rose Wilcher, FHI360 / LINKAGES Alison Cheng, USAID Juan Flores, USAID Aisha Yansaneh, USAID

14:45 Opening Remarks Cameron Wolf, USAID 14:53 HIV Prevention 2.0 (HP2): Achieving an AIDS-Free Generation in Senegal Stefan Baral, Johns Hopkins University 15:03 Leveraging Adaptive Implementation Strategies to Achieve Universal Coverage of ART in Senegal (“TnS Senegal”) Daouda Diouf, Enda Sante 15:13 Leveraging Community and Peer-Based Approaches to Impact the HIV Treatment Cascade among Men Who Have Sex with Men (MSM) in South Africa (Khanyisa) Refilwe Phaswana-Mafuya, Human Sciences Research Council 15:25 A Hora É Agora ("The time is now"): Comprehensive Approach to HIV Testing and Linkage to Care for Men Who Have Sex with Men in Curitiba, Brazil Raquel De Boni, Brazil National AIDS Department 15:37 Community-based and Online Strategies for Testing, Treatment and PrEP among MSM and Transgender Persons in Thailand Nittaya Phanuphak, Thai Red Cross AIDS Research Center 15:57 Gender Affirmative Transgender Care to Improve the HIV Treatment Cascade in Peru Javier Lama, Asociacion Civil Impacta Salud y Educacion 16:09 Moderated discussion Hally Mahler, FHI 360/LINKAGES 16:37 Closing Remarks Greg Millett, amfAR