In response to RFA-DA-17-014, HIV, HCV and Related Comorbidities in Rural Communities Affected by Opioid Injection Drug Epidemics in the United States: Building Systems for Prevention, Treatment and Control (UG3/UH3), we propose a multi-phase, mixed-methods study that aims to implement and evaluate a novel community response model, which we have named the Community-Based, Client-Centered Prevention Home. Using the organizational infrastructure of a large, multi-site syringe service program serving a geographically disperse population of people who inject drugs in rural communities across Northern Wisconsin, we will build locally responsive systems to facilitate uptake of evidence-based prevention services for high-risk clients. The Client-Centered Prevention Home model incorporates prevention case management and mobile health information technology into traditional harm-reduction services delivered at syringe service programs, which we hypothesize will increase use prevention services. During the UG3 phase, we will perform needs assessments in 6 rural Wisconsin counties in partnership with local stakeholders, and use respondent driven sampling to conduct a cross-sectional epidemiologic evaluation to estimate the prevalence of HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections. Contingent upon meeting recruitment and data collection goals, in the UH3 phase of the project we will deploy and evaluate the Client-Centered Prevention Home model in the 3 counties demonstrating highest vulnerability to worsening epidemics of opioid injection. The 3 remaining counties not selected for implementation will serve as comparison sites in a quantitative evaluation of program effectiveness during year 5. The growing problem of opioid injection in rural Wisconsin is highly significant because it exemplifies trends observed nationally indicating severe vulnerability to worsening epidemics of HIV, HCV, and opioid overdose deaths in rural communities that are substantially underserved by evidence-based prevention interventions. This proposal is highly innovative because it will be the first study to use an evidence-based mHealth strategy and a formal implementation science approach to enhance coordination of prevention services in syringe service programs. It has potential for high impact because of our team's state-wide reach, broad access to at-risk individuals, and robust infrastructure for conducting a rigorous, multi-site evaluation of our proposed model.

Public Health Relevance

/ PUBLIC HEALTH RELEVANCE Rural-dwelling people who inject heroin and other opioids are a highly marginalized population. Poor access to medical and prevention services leaves residents of many rural U.S. communities vulnerable to preventable harms of injection opioid abuse. The overall objective of this project is to implement an innovative yet widely replicable service delivery model which we have named the Community-Based, Client-Centered Prevention Home. The project will use mixed-methods to conduct a comprehensive needs assessment in 6 rural counties across Northern Wisconsin. Using an implementation science framework, we will develop and evaluate a service coordination model within an existing network of rural syringe service programs. Innovative features of this approach include use of a mobile health application to enhance the reach of prevention case managers, who will facilitate clients' access to a comprehensive package of 9 evidence-based prevention services.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Cooperative Agreement Phase II (UH3)
Project #
5UH3DA044826-04
Application #
9985776
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDA1)
Program Officer
Crump, Aria
Project Start
2017-08-15
Project End
2022-07-31
Budget Start
2020-08-01
Budget End
2021-07-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Wisconsin Madison
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
161202122
City
Madison
State
WI
Country
United States
Zip Code
53715