1 / 21

Morbidity Monitoring Project Data for Resource Planning and Evaluation

This project aims to monitor the morbidity data of HIV-infected individuals to inform resource planning and evaluation for HIV prevention and care. It focuses on identifying infected individuals, their behaviors, adherence to treatment, quality of care received, barriers to care, and evaluating the impact of treatment on disease progression and survival. The project utilizes surveillance tools such as interviews and medical record abstractions.

ilenet
Download Presentation

Morbidity Monitoring Project Data for Resource Planning and Evaluation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Morbidity Monitoring ProjectData for Resource Planning and Evaluation A.D. McNaghten Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  2. Data for HIV Prevention and CARE Planning • Who is infected with HIV (race, risk, gender)? • What behaviors are persons who are and are not HIV-infected engaging in? • Are patients receiving care and treatment in accordance with USPHS guidelines? • Are patients receiving care in Ryan White funded facilities receiving the same quality of care as patients in private facilities? • What are the barriers to receiving care and services?

  3. Surveillance Tools • SHAS (interview) • Risk behaviors of persons with HIV infection • Reasons for testing • Factors associated with receipt of antiretroviral therapy • Adherence to therapy • Sex and drug use behaviors • ASD (medical record abstraction) • Clinical outcomes of HIV infection • Trends and risk factors for opportunistic infections • Evaluate impact of treatment and prophylaxis on disease progression and survival

  4. Surveillance Tools • SHDC and SHDC+ (abstraction + interview) • Population-based • Clinical outcomes, treatment • Behaviors • Limitations • ASD and SHAS convenience samples • SHDC not representative of entire state or nation • Limited areas participating • Lack of nationally representative estimates of persons infected with HIV who are in care and • Type and quality of care received • Behaviors currently engaging in

  5. Surveillance Tools • Morbidity Monitoring Project (interview + abstraction) • Locally and nationally representative sample of HIV infected adults in care • Behaviors • Adherence; sexual; drug use; care-seeking • Clinical outcomes • Treatment; CD4 and viral load; opportunistic illnesses • Type and quality of care received • Identify met and unmet needs for HIV care and prevention services • To inform community and care planning groups, health care providers and other stakeholders

  6. Morbidity Monitoring Project1st stage • Sampling frame • 50 states + Puerto Rico + District of Columbia were eligible • Sample selected • Probability Proportional to Size (PPS) • Based on prevalent AIDS cases within each area • 20 areas selected • Based on available funds • Estimated to include >80% of US AIDS cases

  7. Morbidity Monitoring Project 2nd/3rd stage • Sample of providers (~40-60) • Will include large, medium and small facilities/clinics/practices • Public and private • HRSA-funded and non HRSA-funded • Sample of patients (~400) • Randomly sampled within each facility • ≥18 years old; HIV+; receiving care

  8. Adherence Access to care Social Support Substance use Treatment Morbidity Morbidity Monitoring ProjectFocus Areas Quality of care

  9. Morbidity Monitoring ProjectAccess to Care Among PLWH: • What proportion use multiple sources of care? • What are the met/unmet needs for medical services? • What proportion who know their diagnosis are not in care?

  10. Morbidity Monitoring ProjectTreatment Among PLWH: • What proportion are receiving treatment and care according to the PHS guidelines? • Of those eligible for ART, what proportion are prescribed ART? • What proportion on ART are adherent to the current regimen? • What factors are associated with non-adherence to ART?

  11. Morbidity Monitoring ProjectBehaviors Among PLWH: • What risk behaviors for HIV are people engaging in? • To what extent do they feel stigmatized due to HIV? • What prevention and support services are they receiving?

  12. Where are we?

  13. Morbidity Monitoring Project Plan Year 1 Data Collection 2005 • 13 sites • 6 interview and abstraction • 6 interview only • 1 abstraction only • 13 sites start-up activities • Year 2-4 Data Collection (2006-2008) • 26 sites to conduct data collection • Interviews and abstractions

  14. Critical Issues

  15. Provider Acceptance • Locally • Conduct provider education sessions • Identify key members of clinical and public health community to promote and support the project • Nationally • Convening a provider advisory board • Provide technical assistance in development of provider education materials and recruitment

  16. Community and Consumer Acceptance • Locally • Community involvement in the MMP • Identify key members of community to promote support of the project and get community and consumer input • Nationally • Convening a community advisory board • Provide technical assistance in development of consumer education materials and patient recruitment

  17. Ongoing Collaboration • Community, providers, local/state health departments, CDC • Provider recruitment • Patient recruitment • Data collection • Needed data for allocation of prevention and care resources

More Related