Health Department Structural Changes to Advance Integration of HIV Prevention and Care Services
Resource updated 02/28/2022
Resource updated 02/28/2022
Discussion of how RWHAP recipients can leverage or align local Getting To Zero (GTZ) or Ending The Epidemic (ETE) initiatives to accomplish integrated planning objectives.
Resource updated 03/15/2023
Table presenting various software systems that are RSR-Ready build.
Resource updated 01/29/2024
Community Health Worker (CHW) models are a strategy to reduce inequities in HIV. This presentation will describe an evaluation of 397 CHW program participants, with findings on the impact on barriers to care and clinical outcomes, as well as the relationship among unmet needs, CHW encounters, and clinical outcomes.
Resource (Conference Presentation) updated 09/14/2023
The five stages of preparing a care/prevention integrated plan (organize and prepare; prioritize; implement; monitor and make improvements; communicate and share progress). Section in the Integrated HIV Prevention and Care Planning Online Resource Guide.
As part of the Ryan White Services Report (RSR), you are required to submit de-identified client-level demographic, service, and clinical data. Rather than filling out an online form (as with the Recipient Report and the Provider Report), you must upload these data in an electronic file, with a record for each client, in a specific XML (eXtensible Markup Language) format. Each client record must be assigned an encrypted Unique Client Identifier (eUCI).
Resource updated 09/14/2023
Resource updated 07/02/2024
Resource updated 09/19/2023
HIV planning groups are responsible for overseeing the planning and implementation of HIV prevention and care activities within communities. Historically, prevention and care programs have operated separate planning groups. RWHAP Part A and Part B recipients and CDC-funded prevention jurisdictions have conducted parallel planning activities, oftentimes with little collaboration or coordination. As a way to reduce duplicative planning activities and streamline the work of planning groups, a number of jurisdictions have integrated their HIV planning groups.
Resource updated 09/14/2023
Resource updated 02/28/2022
This self-paced course from the Integrated HIV/AIDS Planning TA Center serves as an introduction to the fundamentals of integrated planning, and is designed for anyone who is new to integrated HIV prevention and care planning or anyone who would like a refresher on the basics.
By the end of this course, you will be able to:
Resource updated 07/28/2021
Resource updated 09/14/2023
In this webinar, panelists discussed the ways in which power imbalances can manifest in HIV planning bodies; how their planning bodies have sought to promote equity; and strategies that can be implemented to foster equity and mitigate power imbalances based on race, education, age, and socioeconomic status.
Resource updated 11/22/2021
This is a Fact sheet for providers. Mechanisms provided are used in un-duplicating client level data compiled by the use of an eUCI for each client.
Resource updated 09/14/2023
Resource updated 02/26/2024
Resource updated 07/07/2022
Resource updated 08/09/2022
The fourth webinar in our series, Charting the Course for the Next Five Years: 2022-2026 Goals, Objectives, and Strategies, focuses on Section V of the Integrated Plan Guidance - 2022-2026 Goals and Objectives. This section details the "what" and "how" of your Integrated Plan, and will serve as the playbook for health departments, service providers, stakeholders, and people with HIV through 2026. During the webinar, presenters from the West Central Florida Ryan White Care Council
Resource updated 07/07/2022
Resource updated 07/07/2022