Source
- IHIP (72)
- Strengthening Systems of Care for People with HIV and Opioid Use Disorder (9)
- Best Practices Compilation (7)
- HRSA HIV/AIDS Bureau (HAB) (7)
- Technical Assistance Provider Innovation Network (TAP-in) (5)
- Center for Advancing Health Policy and Practice (3)
- Evidence-Informed Interventions (E2i) (3)
- Cleveland/Lorain/Elyria TGA (3)
- AETC National Coordinating Resource Center (NCRC) (2)
- Dissemination of Evidence Informed-Interventions Project (DEII) (2)
- Center for Innovation and Engagement (2)
- NASTAD (2)
- AIDS Action Foundation (2)
- University of Washington (1)
- NMAC (1)
- Center for Quality Improvement and Innovation (CQII) (1)
- Boston University School of Social Work Center for Innovation in Social Work and Health (1)
- National Council for Behavioral Health (1)
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (1)
- Abt Associates (1)
- National Clinician Consultation Center (1)
- University of Texas Health, San Antonio (1)
- SPNS HCV Cure among People of Color with HIV (1)
- SPNS Black MSM Initiative (1)
- SAMHSA (1)
- Massachusetts Department of Public Health (1)
- University of California, San Francisco (1)
Display as
170 items found
Best Practices • 03/20/2024
Best Practices • 01/08/2024
Resources • 07/20/2023
Resources • 07/06/2023
Best Practices • 04/26/2023
Resources • 07/20/2023
Resources • 03/22/2023
Best Practices • 06/09/2020
Resources • 12/15/2022
Webinars • 12/14/2022
Best Practices • 01/10/2023
Conference Presentations • 12/27/2022
Webinars • 02/22/2024
Resources • 07/06/2023
Resources • 07/06/2023
Resources • 07/20/2023
Resources • 07/20/2023
Webinars • 03/09/2023
Best Practices • 06/09/2020
Resources • 08/26/2021
Webinars • 12/14/2022
Conference Presentations • 12/27/2022
Webinars • 02/22/2024
This webinar discusses evidence-based interventions for meth users, as well as community and other programs that are focused on the needs of black, gay, bisexual, same-gender-loving men with HIV who use meth and how to optimize HIV treatment outcomes while reducing harm and stigma.
Best Practices • 03/20/2024
Through the Practice Transformation Project, the Native American Community Clinic and Midwest AIDS Education and Training Center developed strategies to increase testing and linkage to care within the American Indian/Alaska Native population, and for those who inject drugs and are experiencing homelessness. These ongoing efforts have increased HIV testing rates by 10 percentage points through harm reduction, community outreach, and culturally sensitive strategies.
Best Practices • 01/08/2024
Clínica Bienestar (Spanish for “Wellness Clinic”) was developed to provide comprehensive, integrated HIV primary care services to Spanish-speaking and bilingual people of Puerto Rican ancestry, with HIV who inject drugs. Clínica Bienestar is a multilevel, multipronged intervention combining evidence-based practices in behavioral health and HIV medical care with a transnational approach to care. Clínica Bienestar positively impacted retention in HIV medical care and viral suppression.
Resources • 07/20/2023
Terms describing key concepts and components of the HIV and opioid use disorder (OUD) care and treatment systems.
Resources • 07/06/2023
Tool for addressing stigma in relation to systems-level policies and practices that can improve individual level interventions.
Resources • 07/06/2023
Guide on how to coordinate HIV/HCV treatment with substance use treatment and recovery.
Resources • 07/20/2023
Considerations for how state agency staff can develop and maintain an accessible, HIV and opioid use disorder (OUD) service inventory.
Best Practices • 04/26/2023
Intervention to create a safe place for delivering stigma-free, trauma-informed and integrated HIV, addiction medicine and behavioral health services under a single roof.
Resources • 07/20/2023
Description of the role of peers in care for people with HIV and OUD and how a state’s Medicaid program can fund peer services.
Resources • 07/20/2023
Tool to support state health departments in identifying opportunities for enhanced coordination between HIV and OUD funding and service provision.
Resources • 03/22/2023
Description of two states' approaches to building and supporting an HIV and opioid use disorder (OUD) workforce and considerations for investing in a collaborative workforce.
Webinars • 03/09/2023
Review of how to integrate services using a syndemic approach in order to collectively address HIV, STIs, viral hepatitis, and substance use disorders.
Best Practices • 06/09/2020
Core interventions related to addressing substance use in order to eliminate disparities in viral suppression rates.
Resources • 08/26/2021
Discussion guide to elicit a conversation about language, stigma, and discrimination as a means of strengthening care systems.
Resources • 12/15/2022
This library includes various substance use screening tools. These tools are intended to provide a valid and reliable snapshot of a client 's substance use, which may point toward a need for further assessment and specialized support.
Webinars • 12/14/2022
The webinar features two interventions designed to improve linkage to and retention in care and improve health outcomes: one on integrating HIV and addiction services and one on delivery of early intervention services for persons with HIV and STI diagnoses.
Best Practices • 01/10/2023
The RWHAP Part F SPNS program funded the Building a Medical Home for Multiply Diagnosed HIV-Positive Homeless Populations initiative from 2012–2017, to provide coordinated housing supports and HIV, behavioral and mental health care to people experiencing homelessness. Nine funded demonstration sites created partnerships with housing providers, integrated behavioral health and HIV care, and provided intensive patient navigator services. A multi-demonstration site evaluation found that, compared to baseline, participants were more likely to be virally suppressed after 12 months in the intervention.
Conference Presentations • 12/27/2022
The objective of this study is to assess key stakeholders, including patients, for readiness to adopt a new standard of care. Because many people with HIV in Alabama experience low literacy, low income, and are racial minorities, data suggests they will experience greater barriers to healthcare information technology, like PROs and Telehealth.