Categories• Category A • Category B • Category C • Category D |
Category A: Routine and Expanded Testing
3. Rates of Hepatitis C Virus Testing among US Veterans in
Department of Veterans Affairs Care, 2011
L Backus
5. Barriers and Facilitators to HIV and Hepatitis C Testing among
Active Intravenous Drug Users
J Barocas
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
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
21. Barriers to On-Site Rapid HIV Testing in New Jersey Substance
Abuse Treatment Programs
N Cooperman
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
56. Texas’ Experience with Routine HIV Testing in Healthcare
Settings.
J McFarlane
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
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
69. Never-Testing for HIV Among New York City (NYC) Adults Aged
18-64 Years, 2010
C Philippou
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
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
79. Oral Fluid Is Inferior to Fingerstick Point-of-Care HIV Tests
Among Seattle MSM
J Stekler
81. Routine HIV Testing As a Vital Sign - Two Years’ Experience
G Teferi
83. Using Conventional HIV Tests for HIV diagnosis on Oral Fluid
Specimens.
t vermoesen
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
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
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
108. Strengthening the Circle with Tribal Initiatives on HIV/AIDS
E Bennett-Barnes
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
115. Estimating the Number of Injection Drug Users in the United
States to Calculate National Rates of HIV Infection
A Lansky
117. HIV/AIDS-related hospitalization rates in US short-stay
hospitals, 1982-2010
R Merchant
119. Persons Diagnosed and Living with HIV/AIDS (PDLWH/A) who can
Potentially Transmit HIV through Heterosexual Contact 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
123. A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of the Washington, D.C.
Department of Health’s HIV/AIDS
Linkage to Care Programs
J Wedeles
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
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
145. The State of HIV in Primary Care: A Fractured Landscape
A Johnson
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
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
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
164. Project ECHO: Outcomes of Hepatitis C Treatment by Primary
Care Providers
K Thornton