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Implementing Trauma Informed Care in HIV Primary Care in the Southeast

$762,570R56FY2019MHNIH

Emory University, Atlanta GA

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Abstract

ABSTRACT The high prevalence of trauma (i.e. child abuse, intimate partner violence) and associated negative impact on health, health-promoting behaviors, and engagement in the HIV care continuum in people living with HIV (PLH) underscore the need for trauma screening and management integrated into HIV services to optimize care effectiveness and improve retention, adherence to therapy, and overall physical and mental well-being. Trauma-informed Care (TIC) is an organizational structure and treatment framework that involves understanding, recognizing, and responding to the effects of trauma. TI-systems: 1) realize the widespread impact of trauma and understand potential paths for recovery; 2) recognize signs and symptoms of trauma in clients, staff, and others involved with the system; 3) respond by fully integrating knowledge about trauma into policies, procedures, and practices; and 4) seek to actively resist re-traumatization. Evidence from mental health, substance use and social service settings demonstrates that TIC enhances the effectiveness of evidence-based health services, improves patient outcomes, increases staff morale, and is cost-effective, leading to several high- level calls for integration of TIC into HIV services (TI-HIV Care). However, empirical evidence demonstrating the feasibility and effectiveness of TI-HIV Care in terms of HIV care continuum outcomes (retention, viral suppression) and guiding the implementation of TI-HIV Care implementation and evaluation in HIV care settings is lacking. Recognizing that low-income and racial/ethnic minority populations experience higher rates of trauma, we propose to work within the infrastructure of the Ryan White (RW) HIV/AIDS Program (a federally-funded nationwide program that supports comprehensive primary medical care and support services for PLH who are un/underinsured) to execute the following aims: 1) conduct a mixed methods assessment among administrators, staff and providers working in RW primary care clinics across the Southeastern US (the epicenter of the US HIV epidemic) to access inner and outer context factors that may influence adoption of TIC in these clinics, 2) conduct a hybrid Type 1 effectiveness implementation study of three RW-funded HIV clinics in Georgia (one urban, Atlanta site; one rural, South Georgia site; one control site), two that are integrating TIC into their services, and in parallel, evaluate multi-level factors associated with TIC reach, level of adoption, and implementation within and across these clinics, and 3) examine the efficacy of implementing TI-HIV care on primary outcomes: HIV care retention and viral load suppression and secondary outcomes: patient satisfaction, quality of life, and trust in medical care, and provider/staff job satisfaction, burnout, and engagement in self-care at the two intervention Georgia clinical sites relative to the control site. Findings will enable an evidence-driven response to the high- level calls for integration of TIC into HIV primary care services and provide concrete guidance for TIC integration in RW clinics at the epicenter of the US HIV epidemic.

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