“Everything…Fell Apart Once COVID-19 Hit”—Leveraging the COVID-19 Response to Strengthen Public Health Activities toward Ending the HIV Epidemic: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- (1)
- Study Design
- (2)
- Recruitment
- (3)
- Data Collection
- (4)
- Data Analysis
- (5)
- Quality Considerations
- (6)
- Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Themes
3.1.1. Rebuilding Teams and Adapting Culture for Success in EHE Activities
We’ve had a lot of vacancies in our program over the past year which have been delayed even further because of COVID. We don’t have a very large team right now. But, as we are rebuilding this team, we are also thinking and strategizing about how we can better incorporate these strategies of PrEP [pre-exposure prophylaxis] and HIV Linkage to Care within our partner services work.(ID 23)
COVID really forced us out of that [working in silos within the health department] and made us more aware of how content-driven our staffing structures are, and how it really doesn’t work very well when you are trying to like mobilize for an emergency, you really need all types of people with different skills and backgrounds… [we were] suddenly able to work really directly with medical directors and epidemiologists and people that [we’ve] always worked with before, but in a very limited capacity… [COVID-19] shifted us to kind of day-to-day partnerships and using data and information and all of this stuff like much more effectively because we had people at the table who were very close to that piece of the [health department] machine.(ID 24)
I think a… lesson learned [from COVID-19] is… trying to move away from that culture of grant management. I think there’s a time period where that was really, really important to…be able to perform a certain way and to be able to show that you’re checking all the boxes, following all the rules. And at the end of the day, that’s not what ends an epidemic.(ID 24)
3.1.2. Recognizing and Modernizing the Role of DIS
The COVID pandemic has impacted our program quite substantially. For many jurisdictions, HIV partner services aligns very closely with the work that’s needed for COVID contact elicitation and notification, so many staff are pulled from their HIV/STI programs to assist in the COVID work…it has left quite a big gap in our program work.(ID 23)
There was a period of time where we talked a lot about the heroes of COVID. And the frontline health care workers. And I think the people who were definitely not in the spotlight were HIV prevention outreach workers…long before the vaccines were available, were going out in the community still, delivering services, wearing masks, and using at the time our best safety precautions. But those providers have sustained services throughout the pandemic.(ID 33)
There has been a much greater emphasis [during the COVID-19 pandemic] on using web-based services, social…networks of Facebook, and mainstream social networks, but also hook up apps and those types of resources. People have been more restricted in terms of how much community outreach they can do…if people aren’t gathering in public en masse in the way that they used to, then you got to find other ways to engage and connect with them…That’s been probably one of the biggest shifts is less in-person outreach and education and more finding ways to connect with people electronically [for HIV activities]…There’s a lot of money right now going into recruiting and engaging people into testing services by using social media, by being very targeted and intentional in that way.”(ID 33)
We hope that with… [COVID-19]…there [will be] new investments in disease intervention [for]…more than just eliciting partners and getting the partners taken care of but also linking people to other services that they might need, maybe do some health equity [work]…There is optimism that it could be evolved and not solely focused on how many partners were identified, how many partners were followed up on…I think there is optimism that we will evolve partner services to have more impact than it’s having pre-COVID.(ID 25)
3.1.3. Enhanced Community Awareness of the Public Health Role in Disease Response and Prevention
We [public health department] were [in] a leadership role as perfecting a unified message, which I think became very clear in COVID. Like, you know, a kind of a clear-headed, unified, this is a public health message. And, I think we got visibility there. I think, prior to that, we were kind of invisible, people knew [disease intervention specialists]… because we were the awful people who ran after them for [HIV/STI services]. We were doing mobile vaccinations, we were doing mobile testing, reaching out [to] providers, and a lot more calls. And I think [that resulted in] recognition from the public that public health is pretty important [for] the community.(ID 21)
We’re in a really interesting time for HIV prevention and public health. Because the general knowledge about disease intervention, the consciousness of it is so much higher now because of COVID. Because when you describe HIV prevention to people, they will say…“That sounds a lot like what we do with COVID-19.”(ID 33)
People start talking about different serotypes, or Delta variant, or Omicron variants. So, people start understanding what the sequences is, genetic sequences. I think even in this aspect COVID was instrumental. I do believe that understanding of overall use of or building the internal knowledge… [of] molecular epidemiology will increase across the board, across all of the jurisdictions. This is…one of the strategies, right, under the EHE is…to do a molecular cluster analysis.
I think the challenge for HIV and taking the lessons that maybe we have as a society from COVID and apply that to HIV is, people don’t always think of HIV as an ongoing epidemic, or a major health issue anymore…That’s a testament to the effectiveness of HIV prevention services and…to the value of antiretroviral therapies that people don’t associate…HIV [with]…a death sentence anymore. Those messages have been effective and gotten out there. And so… once we feel like COVID is more under control, how do we then take those lessons and then apply them to the other major diseases that we’re trying to address?(ID 33)
The only thing, I think that has come out of it [COVID-19] is I think people have gotten attention to the field of public health and the need to invest in it. However, I think that benefit, unfortunately, might have been offset by the mistrust and confusion and political negatives around science that has come up.(ID 8)
3.1.4. Leveraging COVID-19 Data Systems and Infrastructure for EHE Activities
COVID has really highlighted how…our infrastructure on electronic lab reporting is not great. For example…a lot of people report to us still via a fax machine, which just is a lot of extra work for manual data entry…for surveillance purposes. So, but one of the benefits of COVID is that we’re really trying to address all of those issues, to really address the timeliness of getting data for COVID response ‘cause it’s a really short window that we have to respond. But the side benefit of that is it’s gonna improve our infrastructure for all of our reportable conditions.
We’re trying to use COVID as an opportunity to take…the resources that are certainly prioritized for COVID and have it…undergird our data capacity in a way that, yes, we can have more responsiveness toward COVID. But it could also serve as creating more capacity and efficiency for all of our other reportable conditions like HIV. So, I think we’re–even though we don’t have current resources, what we are doing as a department is also trying to leverage this current COVID opportunity, lots of resources going to COVID right now, they may not last forever, but if there’s a way to help with some of our core infrastructure building, then we’re trying to do that.
Because of COVID, I think we’ve had to touch some different systems that work more efficiently than the things that we have in HIV. So one of the things I did before was work on COVID contact tracing and we used a system…which was really fantastic compared to some of the stuff that I’ve ever seen in public health before.(ID 24)
Some of the systems that we had in place for COVID [were] just very user-friendly, very intuitive…I think there… [were] some really good innovations to develop systems that partners could use that would integrate with the health department that would be user-friendly and compatible with other systems [for HIV activities].(ID 25)
That used to be, you know, days, maybe even weeks in some worse case scenarios [to perform outreach to someone newly testing positive for HIV]. For COVID, we’ve been able to cut that down tremendously, and that’s because we were able to build out an electronic way to be able to do that [notify the contact tracing team in as close to real time as possible]. So that’s what I mean as one example of my hope for what could happen with additional resources for HIV.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Category | n (%) |
---|---|
Race 2 | |
Black/African American | 4 (16.0) |
White | 18 (72.0) |
Asian/Asian American/Pacific Islander | 3 (12.0) |
Native American/American Indian/Alaska Native/Indigenous | 2 (8.0) |
Other | 1 (4.0) |
Hispanic/Latino Ethnicity | |
Yes | 6 (24.0) |
No | 19 (76.0) |
Age | |
18–29 | 1 (4.0) |
30–39 | 9 (36.0) |
40–49 | 7 (28.0) |
50–59 | 6 (24.0) |
60 or older | 2 (8.0) |
Gender | |
Cisgender female | 15 (60.0) |
Cisgender male | 9 (36.0) |
Transgender male | 1 (4.0) |
Organization | |
Public health department | 21 (84.0) |
Non-profit organization | 1 (4.0) |
Other government agency or planning committee | 3 (12.0) |
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Share and Cite
Devlin, S.A.; Garcia, M.; Fujimoto, K.; Hallmark, C.; McNeese, M.; Schneider, J.; McNulty, M.C. “Everything…Fell Apart Once COVID-19 Hit”—Leveraging the COVID-19 Response to Strengthen Public Health Activities toward Ending the HIV Epidemic: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 15247. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215247
Devlin SA, Garcia M, Fujimoto K, Hallmark C, McNeese M, Schneider J, McNulty MC. “Everything…Fell Apart Once COVID-19 Hit”—Leveraging the COVID-19 Response to Strengthen Public Health Activities toward Ending the HIV Epidemic: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(22):15247. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215247
Chicago/Turabian StyleDevlin, Samantha A., Moctezuma Garcia, Kayo Fujimoto, Camden Hallmark, Marlene McNeese, John Schneider, and Moira C. McNulty. 2022. "“Everything…Fell Apart Once COVID-19 Hit”—Leveraging the COVID-19 Response to Strengthen Public Health Activities toward Ending the HIV Epidemic: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 22: 15247. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215247
APA StyleDevlin, S. A., Garcia, M., Fujimoto, K., Hallmark, C., McNeese, M., Schneider, J., & McNulty, M. C. (2022). “Everything…Fell Apart Once COVID-19 Hit”—Leveraging the COVID-19 Response to Strengthen Public Health Activities toward Ending the HIV Epidemic: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(22), 15247. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215247