Marginalized individuals at risk for or living with HIV — the formerly incarcerated, immigrants, people with unstable housing, residents of rural communities, the rising number with substance use disorder — have long faced disparities in obtaining adequate health care. What do HCPs need to know to understand the unique needs of these underserved populations? How can they provide meaningful, helpful, and culturally sensitive care? What barriers continue to prevent their being brought into the HIV care continuum?
Join us in part 1 of this eHIV Review Special Edition, as eHIV Review Program Director Justin Alves, nurse educator at Boston Medical Center, looks to the research to answer these questions, with the assistance of Nicky Mehtani, MD, from UCSF Medical Center in San Francisco, and Vanessa Loukas, NP, from Boston University’s Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine.
Recognize the barriers that limit the participation and engagement of underserved populations in HIV prevention and treatment.
Describe strategies to improve identification and management of substance use in people living with HIV.
Nurse Educator
Boston Medical Center
Boston, MA
(he/him/his)
University of California, San Francisco
Maria X. Martinez Health Resource Center
San Francisco Department of Public Health
San Francisco, CA
Assistant Professor of Medicine and Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences
Division of Infectious Diseases
Division of Clinical Pharmacology
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Baltimore, Maryland
(she/her/hers)
Nurse Educator
Boston Medical Center
Boston, MA
(he/him/his)
1.0 hour Physicians
1.0 contact hour Nurses
Launch date: January 24, 2024
Expiration date: January 23, 2025