• Am J Prev Med · Nov 2021

    Development of a Citywide Rapid Antiretroviral Therapy Initiative in San Francisco.

    • Oliver M L Bacon, Susa C Coffey, Ling C Hsu, Jennie C S Chin, Diane V Havlir, and Susan P Buchbinder.
    • San Francisco City Clinic, Disease Prevention & Control, Population Health Division, San Francisco Department of Public Health, San Francisco, California; UCSF Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases & Global Medicine, Department of Medicine, UCSF School of Medicine, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California. Electronic address: oliver.bacon@sfdph.org.
    • Am J Prev Med. 2021 Nov 1; 61 (5 Suppl 1): S47-S54.

    IntroductionEnding the HIV epidemic in the U.S. holds rapid antiretroviral therapy as a key strategy to improve the health of those with HIV and to decrease transmission. In 2015, Getting to Zero San Francisco, a multisector consortium, expanded rapid antiretroviral therapy citywide.MethodsA Getting to Zero San Francisco Rapid ART Program Initiative for HIV Diagnoses Committee (academic, community, service delivery, health department partners) designed the program, protocol, dissemination plan, and monitoring strategy. Newly diagnosed patients were linked to an HIV medical home or Rapid ART Program Initiative for HIV Diagnoses initiation hub to best deliver rapid antiretroviral therapy across a diverse patient mix, with a goal of ≤5 working days from diagnosis to care and ≤1 day from care to antiretroviral therapy. Stakeholders were trained on rapid antiretroviral therapy via Getting to Zero San Francisco meetings, in-services, public health detailing, and peer-to-peer recruiting, prioritizing HIV clinics serving patients of color, Latinx ethnicity, youth, and the uninsured or publicly insured. Rapid ART Program Initiative for HIV Diagnoses-specific metrics were derived from surveillance data; stratified by sex/gender, age, race/ethnicity, and housing status; and presented at public meetings. Data were analyzed between January and April 2021.ResultsFrom 2014 to 2018, median time from diagnosis to care decreased 71% (7 to 2 days), care to antiretroviral therapy decreased from 19 to 0 days, and diagnosis to virologic suppression decreased 51% (94 to 46 days). Improvements occurred regardless of age, race/ethnicity, sex/gender, exposure, or housing status.ConclusionsDuring a citywide initiative to optimize antiretroviral therapy initiation, time from HIV diagnosis to care, antiretroviral therapy, and virologic suppression decreased across all affected groups to varying degrees. The Rapid ART Program Initiative for HIV Diagnoses Committee continues to address challenges to retention and expand implementation.Copyright © 2021 American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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