1 / 11

RYAN WHITE GRANTEE PROGRAM OVERVIEW

RYAN WHITE GRANTEE PROGRAM OVERVIEW. GREATER BALTIMORE HIV HEALTH SERVICES PLANNING COUNCIL MEETING May 16, 2017. RWG.

issac
Download Presentation

RYAN WHITE GRANTEE PROGRAM OVERVIEW

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. RYAN WHITE GRANTEE PROGRAM OVERVIEW GREATER BALTIMORE HIV HEALTH SERVICES PLANNING COUNCIL MEETING May 16, 2017

  2. RWG In 2011,The Baltimore City Health Department initiated a collaboration with The Maryland State Division of corrections, Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services to promote the continuation of care for HIV-infected individuals that are re-entering into the Baltimore EMA. The Baltimore City Health Department funds sub-recipients under Part A Minority Aids Initiative grant

  3. RWG Sub-recipients provides pre-release services to inmates made known to the Department who will be releases up to 180 days prior to their release date.The sub- recipients will provide those persons being released from custody with medical, supportive and social services.

  4. RWG The Ryan White Grantee Program Manager assignsthe inmate to one of the sub-recipients. Services areprovided to the inmates based on their service needs and regardless of his or her housing location at the time of discharge. The MAI sub-recipient will conduct at least two pre-released visits with the inmates to initiate discharge planning

  5. RWG Clients are followed for at least two confirmed HIV related medical services appointments. Each assigned client that is successfully closed-out after six months, will be placed on retention monitoring for continued review of the clients viral load, and other supportive and social outcomes.

  6. RWG FLOWCHART

  7. Prisoners Reentering back into the Baltimore-Towson EMA *2016 incomplete – linked/2 visits

  8. New Initiatives

  9. RWG PARTNERSThe Department of Health and Mental Hygiene Baltimore City Health Department, Prevention Wexford Health Baltimore Crisis and Prevention * Sub-recipients: Park West Health Systems Total Health Care John Hopkins HIV Women’s Program University of Maryland Jacques Initiative Continually building new relationships in FY17June, 2017*

  10. RWG The Ryan White Grantee team is aware of the barriers surrounding the person’s released from incarceration and re-entering back into the community. There is a shared fellowship in the attitudes, interests, and goals for positive results.Major changes in one’s lifestyle can be challenging and we find this more prevalent with persons who are HIV/AIDS infected and released from incarceration. Many persons who are transitioning back into the community are dually- diagnosed and homeless. While housed in a correctional facility, some inmates receive medical health care and are administered HIV/AIDS medications. Once released many PLWHA are faced with stigma and social issues from housing to medical nutrition.

  11. For Partnerships or more informationPlease contact:Renee Hunt410-396-1408renee.hunt@baltimorecity.govBaltimore City Health Department RWG

More Related