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ADOLESCENTS Strengthening Systems for Diagnosis of HIV & Linkage to Care Institute of Medicine April 15-16, 2010 Donna Futterman, MD | AdolescentAIDS.org Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, AECOM Director, Adolescent AIDS Program, Montefiore
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AIDS is NOT Over for Youth 35% New HIV infections among youth 13-29 20,000 Youth infected annually - 1 every hour 54% YMSM; 35% young women; 11% other young men >85% HIV+ youth sexually infected >80% HIV+ youth are racial/ethnic minorities >50% HIV+ youth untested (80% HIV+ gay youth unaware) Growing numbers Perinatally-infected reaching adolescence (2,700) AdolescentAIDS.org
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HIV/AIDS Among Youth Youth Population 42,500,000 (15-24) HIV/AIDS Cases 56,500 (13-24) AdolescentAIDS.org
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HIV Testing & Youth Who gets tested? (CDC 2009) 16% US 18-24yr olds 13% HS youth (19% 12 th grade) -15% Females, 11% Males -22% Blacks, 13% Hispanics, 11% Whites -22% of youth who ever had sex No youth-specific data on testing venues AdolescentAIDS.org
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HIV+ Youth Engaged in Care in 2009 (12 ATN Sites) Bronx NYC San Francisco Baltimore Puerto Rico Chicago - Children’s Philadelphia Miami Memphis St Petersburg & Tampa AdolescentAIDS.org Washington, DC Chicago - Stroger
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ATN Survey of 2009 HIV+ Youth N=400 AdolescentAIDS.org
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ATN Survey of 2009 HIV+ Youth N=400 AdolescentAIDS.org
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HIV Testing Among Youth: Barriers & Facilitators Medical Institutional and Legal Youth and Cultural AdolescentAIDS.org
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Medical Barriers Most providers don’t see testing as part of routine care Prevention counseling still assumed integral to HIV testing so think they don’t have the time or training needed to test Provider’s fear delivering a positive diagnosis Youth diagnosed late (CD4 = 378/mm c ) Providers unaware of risk, even for STI patients Not all insurance companies reimburse for testing Confidentiality and consent a problem for youth Lack of streamlined administrative systems Youth friendly health care not widely available AdolescentAIDS.org
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Medical Facilitators CDC and medical societies support routine testing Most youth accept test when offered Most states now have laws that streamline C&T and eliminate written consent Tools exist for implementing routine testing and streamlining counseling (ACTS) Increasingly, public health focused on improved case finding (Municipal scale-ups) The Medical System holds the key: Linkage to care is optimized in these settings Consumers expect to receive confidential, quality care Yet, potential not reached AdolescentAIDS.org
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Municipal Scale-Ups
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It’s Time for a Paradigm Shift! HIV/AIDS is a medical condition. Providers and institutions must stop sailing around HIV testing obstacles. It’s Time for a Paradigm Shift! HIV/AIDS is a medical condition. Providers and institutions must stop sailing around HIV testing obstacles.
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The real mountain of work begins when patients learn they are HIV+ We must put our resources where they are needed by shifting tasks… The real mountain of work begins when patients learn they are HIV+ We must put our resources where they are needed by shifting tasks… FromTo Belaboring the decision to testDiagnosing HIV & providing care Patient requested onlyRoutinely offered by providers Testing by counselors onlyTesting by all providers
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Institutional and Legal Youth among the least insured (25% lack insurance) Vulnerable communities not well served Economic, racial, gender, and sexual orientation disparities Homophobia and lack of data and effective outreach to LGBTQ communities Sex education is inadequate Lack of coordination within and between federal and local agencies serving youth Confidentiality & Consent: Young people have legal rights and protections but many providers and youth unaware of laws FACILITATOR: Youth can consent to HIV test and in 26 states can consent to treatment without parent AdolescentAIDS.org
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Youth and Cultural New generation every 5 years so need ongoing and updated programming and social marketing Youth feel invincible, not afraid of HIV AIDS is invisible in many communities Fear of disclosure to parents; HIV, sex and sexual orientation FACILITATOR: Free, rapid and painless testing AdolescentAIDS.org
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Recommendations National strategy to promote the routine offer of HIV testing in all youth serving organizations/institutions (i.e. medical, education, social services, corrections) Make HIV testing a quality indicator for facility accreditation/evaluation Mobilize and train providers to offer culturally competent testing routinely Enhance promotion of testing among highest risk youth: msm, youth of color, youth with mental illness or substance use Help newly diagnosed youth accept their status and access care AdolescentAIDS.org
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Recommendations Address laws/policies that impede youth from testing (i.e. age of consent, parental notification) Address insurance coverage, stigma, housing instability, lack of HIV information Monitor youth testing and service gaps Enhance testing among youth-serving institutions Ensure that youth care continues to be funded in era of health reform and budget cutbacks AdolescentAIDS.org
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Contact Us Donna Futterman, MD DFutterman@AdolescentAIDS.org 718-882-0232 Learn more about routine HIV testing: ACTSHIVTest.org
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