Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byChristal Cameron Modified over 9 years ago
1
Internet Connectivity and Health Information Access for Underserved Community Based Organizations: The Houston AIDS Information Link Provides a Successful Model Stephanie L. Normann and Jeffrey A. Meyer
2
Why was HAIL formed? Early in the AIDS epidemic, Houston HIV infected individuals, their caregivers, and the affected community expressed a need for identifying and conveniently obtaining current, accurate, scientific information about HIV/AIDS treatment, care and prevention. Disparities in information about HIV between healthcare workers and the affected community
3
For whom was HAIL organized? HIV affected community Clinical healthcare workers Social services providers Health educators Information providers/librarians
4
Who funded HAIL? The National Library of Medicine’s AIDS Community Outreach grant initiated in 1994 and five successive expansion grants Considerable contributions made by organizations – HAIL agencies donated staff time and services; Neosoft donated Internet service and web page hosting for each agency
5
Who Belongs to HAIL? 15 culturally diverse organizations including African-American and Hispanic service organizations Clinics, service and educational agencies, and public and health sciences libraries National, state, county, city, private, public and not-for-profit organizations
6
HAIL Member Organizations Participating Houston-Based Organizations University of Texas - Houston School of Public Health Library 1994, is the lead agency with management responsibilities for the NLM AIDS project awards. AIDS Education and Training Center - Texas and Oklahoma, 1994- 1999 AIDS Foundation Houston 1997 AIDS Foundation Houston - Spirit Wellness Center, 1999 Amigos Volunteers in Education and Services, Inc., 1995 Bering Omega Community Services, 1997 Body Positive / Houston - The Wellness Center, 1998 Center for AIDS: Hope and Remembrance, 1995
7
HAIL Member Organizations, cont’d Harris County Hospital District, Northwest Health Center, 1999 Harris County Hospital District, Thomas Street Clinic, 1994 Harris County Sheriff's Department, Medical Service Bureau, 1996 Houston Public Library (Central and Montrose branch), 1994 Montrose Clinic, 1994 StatScript Pharmacy - Houston, 1999 WAM Foundation, Inc., 1996 Participating Galveston-Based Organizations AIDS Coalition of Coastal Texas, Inc., 1997 University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, 1997 - AIDS Clinical Trials Unit - Moody Medical Library
8
HAIL Activities - Technical PCs with Internet connectivity provided for each CBO HAIL web page created: http://www.hailinfo.org - guides users to significant HIV resources - links to HAIL members’ home pages Help member CBOs create their own home page and mount their educational materials, i.e., newsletters, programs, etc.
9
Center for AIDS Web Search at HAIL Workstation
11
HAIL Activities - Networking Monthly steering committee meetings Networking and interagency coordination among HAIL staff members and their organizations
12
Monthly Steering Committee Meeting
13
HAIL Anniversary Event
14
Houston Politicians Express Interest in HAIL
15
HAIL Activities – Networking cont’d Exhibiting and demonstrating computer HIV/STD resources at local, state, national, and international HIV focused meetings Collaborating with CBOs and projects outside of HAIL to support their educational efforts, e.g., training and grant writing -- ISP, Project LEAP, SHAPE
16
Project Row Houses – Children’s PC Lab
17
Internet Training Class for Outreach Workers at Project Row Houses
18
HAIL Activities - Education Training sessions for HAIL agency staff on computer basics, database searching (AIDSLINE, etc.), the Internet, web page writing, etc. Steering committee monthly meetings provide educational opportunities, e.g., speakers from service agencies, updates on web-based information resources, etc. Librarian invited to City Health Dept. and community agencies to enhance their own training activities.
19
HPL Opening of Consumer Health Initiative at Houston Community Center
20
What are the Benefits for Staff and Clients? Skills learned in finding, evaluating, and retrieving appropriate health information on the Internet Knowledge gained about wellness and living with HIV Communication facilitated between informed caregivers and patients Computer and Internet technology incorporated into the CBO’s workplace Networks and coalitions built among HAIL CBOs
21
Why is HAIL successful? Diverse populations are represented by the HAIL consortium CBOs which is reflected in the steering committee HAIL supportive of each agency mission Lead HAIL agency acts as a facilitator. Planning and decision making are participatory – everyone has an equal voice Regular steering committee meetings provide opportunity for representatives to share their expertise, promote networking between agencies and client referral
22
Why is HAIL successful?, cont’d Education and training stimulate outreach programs of member agencies Staff take pride in their skills in being able to locate the most up-to-date information on HIV and other health topics on the Internet. This helps the agencies fulfill their mission. Information projects focusing on underserved community based organizations benefit from the support of the resources of a health sciences library.
23
Where are we going now? NLM Outreach Grant officially ends next month but HAIL project will continue: To meet on a quarterly basis To send email alerts to HAIL members about events, new Web resources, HIV prevention, etc. To downlink CDC broadcasts To volunteer at Health Fairs and other community events of interest to members To visit member agencies, update software, etc. To be out in the community to hear what the affected community wants and respond to their needs
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.