2012 Summit Posters

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Categories


Category A
Category B
Category C
Category D

Category A: Routine and Expanded Testing

1. In a High HIV Prevalence Area, Are African-American and Hispanic Patients Aware of Who Should be Tested for HIV in the Routine Opt-Out HIV Testing Era
M Arya

3. Rates of Hepatitis C Virus Testing among US Veterans in Department of Veterans Affairs Care, 2011
L Backus

4. Performance Characteristics of ADVIA Centaur HIV Ag/Ab Combo (CHIV) assay for the simultaneous detection of HIV p24 Antigen and Antibodies to HIV-1 (groups M and O)and HIV-2 in human serum or plasma
L Baker

5. Barriers and Facilitators to HIV and Hepatitis C Testing among Active Intravenous Drug Users
J Barocas

6. Low rates of screening for HIV and hepatitis C among injection drug users not engaged in primary care: A community-based survey
J Barocas

7. HIV Testing Practices Differ among Black Primary Care Physicians in the US According to Physician Characteristics and Patient Demographics
B Baugh

8. Feasibility and Acceptability of Hepatitis C Virus Counseling and Rapid Testing in a Criminal Justice Setting
C Beckwith

10. Internal Evaluation of the Bio-Rad Geenius HIV 1/2 Supplemental Assay
C Bentsen

11. Barriers and facilitators to universal HIV screening among internal medicine residents
M Brennan

12. Hepatitis Education and Testing in Rural Missouri
B Burkett

13. Routine HIV Testing: The Teen Health Clinics’ Experience
R Buzi

14. Synergizing HIV Testing and Viral Hepatitis B Screenings amongst hard to reach Asian & Pacific Islander Populations through Non-Traditional Approaches
B Cabangun

15. Making HIV Testing a Routine Component of Gynecologic Care for All Women
R Carlson

16. Structural Modifications Allowing for Efficient Implementation of Routine Opt-Out Testing in Community Health Settings
M Chapman

17. Engaging stakeholders in the development of a comprehensive manual for hepatitis C counseling and testing
G Chovnick

18. Routine HIV Testing in Emergency Departments: Capturing Missed Opportunities in Texas
I Clark

19. Performance Characterization of the Second Generation COBAS® AmpliPrep/COBAS® TaqMan® HCV, v2.0 Quantitative Test Incorporating A Novel Dual-Probe Assay Design
B Cobb

20. Increasing Hepatitis B Screening in Asian and Pacific Islander Communities: Best Practices and Lessons Learned in Philadelphia
C Cohen

21. Barriers to On-Site Rapid HIV Testing in New Jersey Substance Abuse Treatment Programs
N Cooperman

22. Testing Preferences and Knowledge of HBV and HCV among a New York City Emergency Department Patient Population
  Cowan

23. Routine HIV Testing in the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA): Impact of National Policy Change and Operational Interventions 2009-2011
M Czarnogorski

24. Increasing Routine Viral Hepatitis Testing: Technical Consultation Report Findings
C Dan

26. Mandatory HIV Testing in the Emergency Department: An Evaluation of Statewide Testing in NY Since the 2010 Legislation Making it Law
D Egan

27. Blood or Swab? Effect of Changing from an Oral Swab to a Whole Blood Finger Stick HIV Test on Rates of Acceptance
A Fatima

28. An algorithm using electronic medical record data accurately identifies patients with unknown HIV status in a large, urban healthcare system
U Felsen

29. Primary care physician implementation of routine HIV screening in Washington, DC: An Assessment of Perceptions, Challenges and Barriers
L Fitzpatrick

30. Implementation of an emergency department HIV routine screening program in inner city Washington, DC: Lessons Learned and New Frontiers.
L Fitzpatrick

31. The Impact of HCV Rapid Testing on Individuals Knowledge of their HCV Status
C Flanigan

32. Mapping the co-occurrence of HIV, hepatitis C, and chlamydia in New York City (NYC) to support targeted testing at Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs)
J Fuld

33. Routine HIV Testing at Montefiore Medical Center: Scale-up Case Studies from New York City's Second Largest Hospital System
D Futterman

34. Self-testing in the Emergency Department (ED) by Kiosk
C Gaydos

35. Scaling Up Community-based HIV Antibody and RNA Testing among Gay Men in San Francisco
S Gibson

36. Impact of electronic medical record and revised triage process on routine HIV screening in the emergency department.
P Green

37. Comparison of Enhanced Targeted Rapid HIV Screening using the Denver HIV Risk Score to Nontargeted Rapid HIV Screening in an Urban Emergency Department and Urgent Care Setting
J Haukoos

38. Novel Emergency Department Registration Kiosk for HIV Screening Increases Engagement of High Risk Patients
Y Hsieh

39. Kiosk-Facilitated Patient Self Testing for HIV in an Emergency Department Rapid HIV Screening Program
Y Hsieh

40. Undiagnosed HIV infection in an urban emergency department: a blinded, cross-sectional serosurvey
M Iscoe

41. Implementing a Rapid HIV Testing Program in a New York City Hospital-based Dental Clinic
M Iscoe

42. Increasing HIV Testing among African-born Immigrants in Dublin, Ireland: A qualitative study of challenges and opportunities in the Irish Health Service
M Iscoe

43. Hepatitis C Virus Screening Practices among Primary Care Physicians in Four Large Primary Care Settings
A Jewett

44. Acceptability and Ease of Use of Home Self-Testing for HIV among Men Who Have Sex with Men
D Katz

45. Point-of-sex testing: Intentions of men who have sex with men to use home-use HIV tests with sex partners
D Katz

46. Endocarditis as a sentinel marker for new epidemics of injection drug use and hepatitis c virus infection
S Keeshin

47. Missed opportunities in HIV testing in New York City
A King

48. HIV Testing in Free, Mobile Dental Clinics in North Carolina
P Klein

49. Culture Change and Expanded HIV Testing
K Koechlin

50. The Implementation of Hepatitis C (HCV) Rapid Testing Technology in HCV Counseling and Testing Sites in Ohio
K Koechlin

51. HIV Risk Screening Practices Among Internal Medicine Residents in 2012
D Krakower

53. Back to Basics: A model for ensuring consistent HIV screening and testing in multi-service CBOs
D Lopez

54. A Comparison of Time Requirements for Targeted and Non-targeted Counselor-based Emergency Department HIV Screening
M Lyons

55. Indications for Testing among Reported Cases of Hepatitis C Virus Infection from Enhanced Hepatitis Surveillance Sites—United States, 2004–2010
R Mahajan

56. Texas’ Experience with Routine HIV Testing in Healthcare Settings.
J McFarlane

57. Can a Video Substitute for An In-Person Discussion In Delivering HIV Pre-Test Information to Spanish-Speaking Latinos and Better Serve Those with Lower Health Literacy?
R Merchant

58. What Affects Acceptance of Routine HIV Screening in Pediatric Emergency Departments by Adolescents?
N Messenger

59. National Hispanic Hepatitis Awareness Day (NHHAD): Adapting a highly effective community mobilization model and social marketing campaign
B Morales-Reid

60. Assessment of Need for Targeted Acute HIV Screening in the Emergency Department
L Moreno-Walton

62. Acceptability and implications of rapid HCV test among high risk young injection drug users
  Page

63. Three years of routine screening for HIV in a large urban hospital system: What has been achieved?
S Pasalar

64. Transmission Network Targeting: Incorporating Social Network and Partner Testing with an Emergency Department HIV Screening Program
R Paulsen

65. Building Sustainable Universal HIV Screening Programs in Pediatric Emergency Departments: A Comparison
J Payne

66. From Recommendation to Implementation: the Long Road to Routine HIV Screening
T Penrose

67. A qualitative exploratory study of social network testing among three high risk populations
J Peterson

68. Integrating Hepatitis C Risk Assessment into HIV Counseling, Testing, and Referral Data Collection Systems
t pham

69. Never-Testing for HIV Among New York City (NYC) Adults Aged 18-64 Years, 2010
C Philippou

70. Reducing barriers to HIV testing – what influences testing offer and uptake? Lessons learned from the HIV in Europe Initiative
D Raben

71. Extent of Hepatitis C Screening and HIV Testing and Linkage to Care Services among Substance Use Treatment Programs in New York City
S Ramachandran

72. Expanding Our Reach: State and Local Health Department Efforts to Increase Access to and Utilization of HIV and HCV Testing
L Randall

73. Hepatitis C Antibody Testing and Follow-up in Primary Care Settings: A Retrospective Study of Four Large, Primary Care Service Centers
D Rein

74. Educational tools to enhance routine HIV Testing in Adolescents and Young Adults
C Rodriguez

75. Integrating Routine HIV Testing in Primary Care
V Rodriguez

76. A Qualitative Assessment of Facilitators and Challenges to the Scale up of HIV Testing in the District of Columbia
J Skillicorn

77. CDC’s Evidence-Based Recommendations for the Identification of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Infection among Persons Born during 1945-1965 in the United States
B Smith

78. Routine HIV testing and linkage to care services offered at Public Aid offices can help identify undiagnosed HIV infections and facilitate linkage to HIV care in urban high risk minority communities
T Soto

79. Oral Fluid Is Inferior to Fingerstick Point-of-Care HIV Tests Among Seattle MSM
J Stekler

80. HIV testing in US Emergency Departments, Outpatient Ambulatory Medical Departments, and Physician Offices, 1993-2010
M Tai

81. Routine HIV Testing As a Vital Sign - Two Years’ Experience
G Teferi

82. Preliminary Results from "Do One Thing:" A comprehensive neighborhood-based HIV and HCV testing, prevention and media campaign in Southwest Philadelphia
S Trooskin

83. Using Conventional HIV Tests for HIV diagnosis on Oral Fluid Specimens.
t vermoesen

84. Creating, Sustaining, and Expanding a Comprehensive HIV Program in an Emergency Department and Community Health Center Setting.
L Wilbur

85. A Review of HIV Home Self-testing: Issues and Implications from a Global Perspective
V Wong

86. Routine Opt-Out HIV Screening on the U.S. – Mexico Border, Opportunities for Diagnosis and Prevention
R Woolard

88. Who better than us? Recruiting individuals with histories of incarceration and substance abuse to increase access to HIV and HCV testing and linkage to care
T Young

89. Umndeni Care Program (UCP): Lessons Learned From Home HIV Testing and Linkage to Care in the South African Generalized Epidemic
B Zanoni

Category B: Prevention Models

90. Near-perfect adherence in US iPrEx RCT sites: Frequency and Correlates.
K Amico

91. HOME: A holistic approach to HIV prevention and program evaluation for young MSM of color in New York City
E Aponte

92. Preparing for and conducting a successful HCV vaccine trial with injection drug users
A Asher

93. Young adults at risk for HCV: Meeting their needs through the UFO Model prevention program
A Asher

94. Circle of Life - multimedia curriculum for Native American youth
E Bennett-Barnes

95. How to implement PrEP
S Cahill

96. Provider Knowledge, Use, and Barriers to the Uptake of PEP and PrEP
A Castel

97. Development of a PrEP Candidate Screening Tool: An Assessment of PrEP Knowledge and Health Behaviors among Individuals at High-Risk for HIV
A Castel

98. HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP): knowledge and attitudes among a New York City emergency department patient population
E Cowan

99. A Best-Practice Community-Based Approach to Hepatitis Prevention for At-Risk Immigrant and Refugee Communities
M El-Shamaa

100. High School Health Education Classes Remain Inadequate in Providing HIV Prevention Information
C Fichtenbaum

102. HIV Providers’ Perceived Barriers and Facilitators to Implementing Treatment as Prevention in Clinical Practice: A Qualitative Study
D Krakower

103. Sustaining Vital Linkages Between Community and Clinical settings for MSM
J Murphy

104. HIV prevention in black churches: the Healing Faith model
R Newells

105. Development and Implementation of a Clinic-Based, Provider-Driven Prevention with Positives (PwP) Pilot Program in New York City (NYC).
S Ramachandran

106. Project ECHO’s (Extension for Community Health Outcomes) Prisoner Health is Community Health: The New Mexico Peer Education Project (NM PEP)
K Thornton

Category C: Outcomes and Impact Evaluation

107. State of the ART: Characteristics of HIV infected patients receiving care in Mississippi (MS), USA from the Medical Monitoring Project, 2009-2010
A Barnes

108. Strengthening the Circle with Tribal Initiatives on HIV/AIDS
E Bennett-Barnes

109. Dynamic trends in HIV/AIDS diagnoses and related biological, sexual, and drug use risk factors among adolescents in Washington, DC
Y Jia

110. Longitudinal Viral Load Predicts Mortality among A Cohort of 3850 HIV-infected individuals
Y Jia

111. Cost Analysis of Positive Charge, a Multi-Site Linkage to Care Program
J Kim

112. Newly Diagnosed Positives Identified by HIV Testing Programs in New York City
A King

113. Impact of Expanded HIV Testing in New York City
A King

114. Building a culturally tailored PrEP demonstration program for young men who have sex with men of color: Lessons Learned from the CRUSH Project in Oakland, California
K Koester

115. Estimating the Number of Injection Drug Users in the United States to Calculate National Rates of HIV Infection
A Lansky

116. Estimating averted HIV-related medical costs on the path to eliminating mother-to-child transmission among HIV-infected pregnant women in New York State: 1998-2010.
F Laufer

117. HIV/AIDS-related hospitalization rates in US short-stay hospitals, 1982-2010
R Merchant

118. Sustained virologic response and the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) among persons with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection: a meta-analysis of observational studies
R Morgan

119. Persons Diagnosed and Living with HIV/AIDS (PDLWH/A) who can Potentially Transmit HIV through Heterosexual Contact in Pennsylvania, 2010.
B Muthambi

120. Persons Diagnosed and Living with HIV/AIDS (PDLWH/A) who can Potentially Transmit HIV through Men having Sex with Men (MSM) in Pennsylvania, 2010.
B Muthambi

121. Clinical Differences between Black and White MSM Newly Diagnosed with HIV Disease in the District of Columbia
J Opoku

122. Using cross-matched HIV and sexually transmitted disease registry data to estimate adherence to dual screening recommendations in New York City
C Shepard

123. A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of the Washington, D.C. Department of Health’s HIV/AIDS
Linkage to Care Programs

J Wedeles

124. Linkage, Engagement and Viral Suppression Rates among HIV-Infected Persons Receiving Care at Medical Case Management Programs in Washington, DC.
S Willis

Category D: Access, Linkage and Retention in Care

125. Increasing Retention in Care for HIV+ Homeless Individuals: Harlem Model Implementation
E Aponte

126. A Qualitative Assessment of Facilitators and Challenges to HIV Linkage to Care Models in Washington, DC
M Bennett

129. Follow-up testing for hepatitis C virus infection: An analysis of Massachusetts surveillance data from 2007-2010.
D Church

130. Mortality trends among people reported with hepatitis C virus infection:Massachusetts, 1992-2009
D Church

131. Engagement in Care applied to US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA): HIV virologic outcomes in an integrated health care system.
M Czarnogorski

132. Routine Testing, Linkage and Retention in Care: A Federally Qualified Health Centers’ (FQHC) Implementation Experience.
L Darden

133. Utility of identifying out of care HIV-infected patients in a hospital setting and enrolling them in a retention intervention
J Davila

134. The State Healthcare Access Research Project on Access to Care for Persons Living with Hepatitis C In Massachusetts
M Ellwood

135. Epidemiological Characterization and Linkage to Care of Newly-Diagnosed HIV-positive persons at an urban hospital in Washington, DC
L Fitzpatrick

137. Integrating HIV Prevention with Hepatitis C Programs Targeting HIV Service Providers, LGBT Service Providers, Substance Use Centers, Correctional Facilities, and Criminal Justice Entities
L Frederick

138. The New York State Center of Expertise on Aging, HIV, Hepatitis and STIs (Center of HIV and Aging)
L Frederick

139. Reaching and Retaining Co-Infected HIV/HCV Residents in Underserved Communities
K Gilgenberg

140. Linkage to HIV Care in the VA Healthcare System
T Giordano

141. Navigating HIV Positive Clients to Care from an Integrated Routine HIV Testing Program in an Urban Hospital
N Glick

142. Alaska LiverConnect: Providing Remote Specialty Liver Disease Education
J Gove

143. in+care Campaign: a national virtual collaborative to improve retention
M Hager

144. Racial Disparities in Unprotected Sex, HIV Infections, and Engagement in Care, Viral Load Suppression among Individuals living with HIV in Hyperendemic MSM Community of Washington DC
Y Jia

145. The State of HIV in Primary Care: A Fractured Landscape
A Johnson

146. Influencing Blacks and African Americans’ Decision to Provide HIV Care: Greater Focus on Medically Underserved Communities and Health Equity
A Johnson

147. Check Hep C: A Demonstration Project for Providing Comprehensive Community-Based Screening, Linkage and Medical Services to New Yorkers with or at Risk for Chronic Hepatitis C Infection
A Jordan

148. Patterns and Correlates of Linkage to Appropriate HIV Care following HIV Diagnosis in the U.S. Medicaid Population
T Juday

149. Impact of payer type on HIV stage of illness at time of initiation of antiretroviral therapy in the United States
T Juday

150. Increasing the Capacity to Treat Hepatitis C and HIV in Primary Care using the Project ECHO Model in a FQHC
K Khatri

151. Understanding Barriers to Linking Persons Living With HIV to Care in the United States: Findings from the Positive Charge Initiative
J Kim

152. Intervention Using Motivational Interviewing Improves Retention in HIV Care
D Konkle-Parker

153. Responding to HIV stigma and lack of data collection within African immigrant and refugee communities in the US
M Korto

155. Assessing Organizational and Network Change for a Linkage to Care Intervention in Louisiana
C Maulsby

156. Emergency Department Utilization and Hospital Admissions after a New Diagnosis of HIV
N Nguyen

157. Increasing Access to Hepatitis and HIV Testing, Care and Treatment: Identifying Provider Training Needs and Services Provided
J Orose

158. Hepatitis Outreach Network: A Practical Strategy for Hepatitis Screening with Linkage to Care in Foreign Born communities
P Perumalswami

159. HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis Health Department Collaborations with Community Health Centers: Successes and Challenges
L Randall

160. Evaluation of a Highly Intensive, Comprehensive, and Individualized Linkage to Care Pilot Intervention in an Emergency Department HIV Screening Program
A Ruffner

161. Using surveillance data to identify HIV-infected persons out-of-care in New York City and offer linkage to care and HIV partner services
C Shepard

162. Support for the Information, Motivation, Behavioral Skills-model situated to retention in HIV-care (sIMB) in identifying theory-based intervention targets to provide point-of-care support for sustained retention in HIV medical care.
L Smith

163. An Innovation in Provider HIV Education: University of New Mexico (UNM) Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) Telehealth & New Mexico AIDS Education and Training Center (NM AETC) HIV Clinic.
K Thornton

164. Project ECHO: Outcomes of Hepatitis C Treatment by Primary Care Providers
K Thornton

165. A comprehensive, multilevel approach to engaging and retaining marginalized heterosexual Black males in Wards 6, 7, and 8 of the District of Columbia in HIV care
A Young