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Kings Fund concluding remarks Professor Chloe Orkin Consultant - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Kings Fund concluding remarks Professor Chloe Orkin Consultant - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Kings Fund concluding remarks Professor Chloe Orkin Consultant Physician in HIV Medicine Barts Health NHS Trust Future of HIV services Delivering HIV care (2017): some challenges for health professionals Sharing NHS records with
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Delivering HIV care (2017): some challenges for health professionals
Sharing NHS records with immigration? Criminalisation of HIV Commissioning (PrEP) Fragmentation
- f services
Trainee vacancies Changing curriculum for trainining GIM HIV services dislocated from GU Little money/time for study leave
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Kings Fund Report
- ‘Should’s’for :
– PHE – DH – NHS E – Health Education England – Local services
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Macro politics….
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Macro-politics….
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Macro-politics….
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Macro-politics….
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Could BHIVA advocate more effectively on policy?
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What should or could BHIVA do?
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BHIVA’s history
> 20 years old Members=1000+
1995-2004 2004-2008 2008-2011 2011-2013 2013-2016
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BHIVA aims
- To advance:
– promotion of good practice in the treatment of HIV – public education through the promotion and dissemination of research
- Delivered via :
– Guidelines – Education – Conferences – Audit
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- BHIVA Standards for HIV Care review underway
- Guidelines :HIV testing , ART, HIV-2, Pregnancy (in progress)
- Conferences: 2 annual conferences
- Audit:
- Alcohol and other substance use and psychological support (2017)
- Monitoring (2018)
- Education:
- App launch
- Diploma and General Medicine courses
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How might we adapt our structure to advocate for better HIV services ?
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New sub-committee structure
Guidelines External Relations Conferences Education Audit
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External Relations
Relationship with traditional media BHIVA spokespeople
- available for unexpected events
- proactive statements related to known events
Social Media (improved speed and approvals) (dynamic content) (memorable photos) Website/app development
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MPS article in PULSE on NICE HIV testing guidelines (2016)
- Article cited: ’caution’, ‘ethical dilemmas’, ‘cultural
sensitivities’, ‘occupational consequences’
- Very strong antithetical reaction lead by BHIVA
- Hundreds of tweets….BUT, more importantly:
- Opportunity to publish our own BHIVA response on
HIV testing in PULSE
- Meeting with CEO of MPS, opportunity to write cases
for MPS publications and to give them CPD on HIV cases
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International Day (IWD 2017)
- Educational campaign on twitter
- Hourly tweets on health issues relating to
women with HIV
- E.g. breastfeeding, menopause, social
issues, testaments of women living with HIV
- Links to scientific articles
- Worked with Salamander Trust, Sophia
Forum and SWIFT
- BHIVA Facebook page pushed twitter
campaign
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We haven’t had a loud voice in social media/traditional media
- IWD: 150 tweets using #BHIVAWomen
- Twitter reach: 60,000 accounts reached
- Facebook: 4500% increase in engagements
- Lots of community engagement
- Celebrity retweets
More social media activity than ever before
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BHIVA conference
- #BHIVA2017
- Day 1 national conference: 500 tweets at
#BHIVA2017
- Aim: to create an audience so when we need to
highlight policy issues, someone is listening
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What does the future hold? What could BHIVA contribute?
- Provide input to consultations
- CRG
- Educate on-line and at conferences
- Disseminate information about how to respond to
fragmentation
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What else
- Professional voice on policy
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Ideas
@britishhivassoc
@britishhivassoc British HIV Association jacqueline:@mediscript.ltd.uk
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Thank you
?
chloe.orkin@bartshealth.nhs.uk @profchloe_orkin
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