by Victoria Mason
on June 21, 2016
( Projects /
Intern Blog )
On Tuesday, June 14 and Wednesday, June 15, I had the opportunity to attend The HIV Prevention Trials Network 2016 Annual Meeting in Arlington, VA. The HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) is a worldwide collaborative clinical trials network that brings together investigators, ethicists, community and other partners to develop and test the safety and efficacy of interventions designed to prevent the acquisition and transmission of HIV. I attended a number of plenary sessions that brought the research, challenges, and risks that surround preventing and treating HIV to my immediate attention. The first plenary session that I attended was a modelling plenary moderated by Dr. Deborah Donnell. Dr. Donnell is a principal investigator of the Statistical and Data Management Center for the HPTN. She also oversees statistical design and analysis as well as data management operations of the Statistical Center for HIV/AIDS Research and Prevention. She is also a Principal Staff Scientist in the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division, Fred Hutchison Cancer Research Center and an affiliate associate professor at the University of Washington in the Department of Global Health. Overall, I enjoyed this session because it provided me with an understanding of how studies are designed and conducted in order to estimate the impact of interventions and how populations at risk are affected.
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HPTN/IMPAACT 2016 Annual Meeting
by Vikas Vannappagari
on June 16, 2016
( Projects /
Intern Blog )
On Tuesday, June 14, I was fortunate enough to be able to attend the HPTN/IMPAACT annual meeting in Arlington, Virginia. The conference offered various plenary sessions to discuss the many facets of HIV prevention and management.
The HPTN Modelling Plenary was moderated by Dr. Deborah Donnell, and featured Drs. Marie-Claude Boily (the leader of the HPTN Modelling Center), Kate Mitchell, and Dobromir Dimitrov as speakers. Speakers discussed the application of mathematical modelling in evaluating the long term impacts of potential interventions. For example, the HPTN 078 study assessed linkage to care of men who have sex with men (MSM) in the cities of Baltimore, Atlanta, Birmingham, and Boston. Mathematical modelling was utilized in the early stages for protocol design, during the study for model development and data analysis, and in the aftermath to predict the final impact of the interventions on HIV incidence. I found the breadth of data that the Center used astounding; hundreds of variables were taken into account when making predictions. This really allowed the researchers to make judgements based on data received at the individual level, personalizing the prevention process and tailoring the outcomes to the patient.
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by Megan McIntosh
on May 25, 2016
On May 20, 2016, my second day as an intern with the Forum for Collaborative HIV Research, I attended a plenary session of the Full Group Meeting of HIV Vaccine Trials Network (HVTN). The session I attended was entitled, “Community Engagement and Advocacy: How do they intersect?” The session was moderated by Susan Buchbinder of HVTN/Bridge HIV and involved a panel of multinational representatives with different roles within HVTN: a Community Advisory Board (CAB) member, an Investigator of Record, a Community Educator and Recruiter (CER), as well as a representative of AVAC: Global Advocacy for HIV Prevention, and the Director of External Relations at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center that hosts the HVTN. In addition, the plenary session reserved time for members of the audience to engage in furthering the conversation, contributing to the involvement of additional perspectives.
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by Grace Osagie
on July 31, 2015
Following the press conference, I was fortunately able to attend a hearing next door on America's growing heroin epidemic under the House of Representatives' Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations. I am sure it was no coincidence that these two events happened on the same day. With 600,000 people addicted to Heroin and 90% of new cases of Hepatitis C belonging to people who inject drugs, it could not have been a more ideal time to talk about these issues facing America's citizens.
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by Grace Osagie
on July 23, 2015
"In order to fully realize the potential significant public health benefits in this area, it is important to ensure that minority, veterans, and medically underserved communities have unhindered access to the full spectrum of healthcare; from screening and diagnosis to therapy and follow up." - Excerpt from Hepatitis Foundation International's Letter to Congress
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by Jonathan Liu
on June 29, 2015
As interns, Grace and I have several opportunities to attend different lectures, talks, and conferences on a variety of public health issues. This past week at Georgetown Law's O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law was the latest of those experiences. The O'Neill Institute's Summer Program on Infectious Diseases and the Law ran from June 22-26 and provided us with a chance to see the intersection between the fields of public health and law and how intertwined they are.
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by Grace Osagie
on June 19, 2015
HPTN's inclusion of a discussion on high risk populations was most compelling, as they are often left out of a lot of discussions in health and medicine. In the meeting. I thought: how often do we get a chance to talk about such high risk populations like sex workers, transgenders, and non-injection drug users in HIV prevention? These are populations that basically define the term "social determinants of health" because as Dr. Mayer expressed, they represent "multilevel axes of risk and vulnerability" to HIV. It was interesting seeing that HIV prevention research takes on different modalities of prevention to accomodate the different populations; whether it be through physical barrier methods such as condom use and other contraceptive techniques, or harm reduction methods like syringe exchange, or treatment as prevention such as Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP) and Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), or even health behavior education.
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by Jonathan Liu
on June 15, 2015
The Forum for Collaborative HIV Research convened its 2015 National Summit on HCV and HIV Diagnosis, Prevention, and Access to Care on June 4th-6th in Arlington, Virginia. The mission of the Summit is to support improvement in HCV and HIV testing, prevention, and linkage to care in the United States. Present at this meeting were the nation's public health scientific and advocacy leadership to discuss state-of-the-art mechanisms and initiatives to support the "National HIV/AIDS Strategy" and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' "Action Plan for the Prevention, Care, and Treatment of Viral Hepatitis".We did a little bit of everything during the Summit. One of our main duties was to take notes during the breakout sessions and help prepare the rapporteur slides. It was interesting to see how a conference worked from an organizer's perspective. Personally, I learned an incredible amount from just being in the room and listening to people speak. It was an amazing experience to be among some of the leaders in the field, hear about current issues, and see public health in action.
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by Micha Zheng on
on August 11, 2014
On Monday, August 4, 2014, the Forum for Collaborative Research hosted its annual Washington Area Interns Networking Day. The program included a guest panel consisting of public health and policy leaders from Washington, D.C.
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by Sydney Butler on
on August 04, 2014
July 28th, 2014 marked the 7th annual World Hepatitis Day, an international event seeking to increase awareness surrounding this viral infection that affects more than 130 million people worldwide. The White House commemorated this occasion on July 30th by recognizing leaders in the fight against this epidemic in a private event hosted at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.
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