The Center for HIV Identification, Prevention, and Treatment Services (CHIPTS) leverages world class science to combat HIV globally, in partnership with communities, families, and individuals impacted by the pandemic. Strategies for integrating, promoting, and diffusing HIV detection, prevention, and care are our primary mission. Investigators from UCLA, Friends Research Institute (Friends), LA County, and research and community partners globally collaborate to achieve CHIPTS' mission. CHIPTS creates opportunities for scientific leadership, expertise, and infrastructure to be leveraged to create, understand, and evaluate: 1) structural & community level interventions; 2) models of adaptation & adoption of efficacious interventions; 3) strategies to reduce disparities for scientists, nations, communities, & individuals; and 4) research agendas that integrate behavioral, biomedical, & technological intervention strategies. The CHIPTS community promotes cutting edge science; networks and builds capacity of scientists, advocates, policy makers, and consumers. Over the next five years, HIV research must capitalize and leverage the revolutionary changes that have occurred: setting the National AIDS Strategy; the global economic recession, which mandates increasingly more cost-effective interventions, especially with a declining USD; technological breakthroughs and integration of mobile phones, point-of-care diagnostics, embedded sensing, the web, and social networking; and the success of circumcision, microbicides, one-minute HIV tests, and oral post- and pre-exposure prophylaxis. To quickly mobilize to these shifts, infrastructure resources and senior expertise is organized to build diverse interdisciplinary teams that can produce new science, scientists, and diffuse the results. CHIPTS' agenda is implemented through six cores, each of which implements scientific, networking, and capacity building activities: Administrative, Development, Methods, Policy, Combination Prevention, and Global Capacity Building. The quality and quantity of the scientific progress is evaluated by a Continuous Quality Improvement Model.

Public Health Relevance

Los Angeles has the second highest number of AIDS cases nationally and is one of the most ethnically diverse epidemics, especially among Men-who-have-Sex-with-Men (MSM). CHIPTS partners on designing and implementing a scientific agenda, networking, and building capacity of the scientists, community and government partner agencies, consumers and policy makers. Concurrently, CHIPTS builds networks in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and South America of scientific collaborations for the epidemic.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
4P30MH058107-20
Application #
9008067
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMH1-ERB-F (05))
Program Officer
Gordon, Christopher M
Project Start
1997-09-30
Project End
2017-01-31
Budget Start
2016-02-11
Budget End
2017-01-31
Support Year
20
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
$1,750,000
Indirect Cost
$542,268
Name
University of California Los Angeles
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
092530369
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90095
Aralis, Hilary J; Shoptaw, Steve; Brookmeyer, Ron et al. (2018) Psychiatric Illness, Substance Use, and Viral Suppression Among HIV-Positive Men of Color Who Have Sex with Men in Los Angeles. AIDS Behav 22:3117-3129
Dangerfield 2nd, Derek T; Harawa, Nina T; Fernandez, M Isabel et al. (2018) Age Cohort Differences in Sexual Behaviors Among Black Men Who Have Sex With Men and Women. J Sex Res 55:1012-1021
Dangerfield, Derek T; Harawa, Nina T; McWells, Charles et al. (2018) Exploring the preferences of a culturally congruent, peer-based HIV prevention intervention for black men who have sex with men. Sex Health :
Comulada, W Scott; Swendeman, Dallas; Koussa, Maryann K et al. (2018) Adherence to self-monitoring healthy lifestyle behaviours through mobile phone-based ecological momentary assessments and photographic food records over 6 months in mostly ethnic minority mothers. Public Health Nutr 21:679-688
Bristow, Claire C; Shannon, Chelsea; Herbst de Cortina, Sasha et al. (2018) Use of Oral Fluid With a Rapid Treponemal Test for Syphilis Evaluation. Sex Transm Dis 45:e65-e67
Ware, Deanna; Palella Jr, Frank J; Chew, Kara W et al. (2018) Prevalence and trends of polypharmacy among HIV-positive and -negative men in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study from 2004 to 2016. PLoS One 13:e0203890
Gorbach, Pamina M; Javanbakht, Marjan; Bolan, Robert K (2018) Behavior change following HIV diagnosis: findings from a Cohort of Los Angeles MSM. AIDS Care 30:300-304
Beymer, Matthew R; DeVost, Michelle A; Weiss, Robert E et al. (2018) Does HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis use lead to a higher incidence of sexually transmitted infections? A case-crossover study of men who have sex with men in Los Angeles, California. Sex Transm Infect 94:457-462
Bogart, Laura M; Dale, Sannisha K; Daffin, Gary K et al. (2018) Pilot intervention for discrimination-related coping among HIV-positive Black sexual minority men. Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol 24:541-551
Earnshaw, Valerie A; Bogart, Laura M; Laurenceau, Jean-Philippe et al. (2018) Internalized HIV stigma, ART initiation and HIV-1 RNA suppression in South Africa: exploring avoidant coping as a longitudinal mediator. J Int AIDS Soc 21:e25198

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