December 1 In commemoration of World AIDS Day,HRSA released the latest Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program data, which show that nine out of ten people with HIV receiving medical care through the program are virally suppressed. Viral suppression means people with HIV taking their medication cannot sexually transmit HIV and can live longer and healthier lives. The percentage of Black/African American clients, Hispanic/Latino clients, and youth and young adult clients receiving care through the program and achieving viral suppression all far exceed overall national viral suppression rates. This announcement highlights the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Programs vital role in expanding access to care for individuals with HIV, improving HIV health outcomes, and ending the HIV epidemic in the United States. Read the release. On Friday, December 1, HRSA Chief of Staff Garrett Devenney and HRSAs HIV/AIDS Bureau Associate Administrator Dr. Laura Cheever joined HIV federal and local leaders, health care providers, community health workers, and people with HIV at a community event at Family Medical and Counseling Services, Inc. in Washington, D.C. During the World AIDS Day event, HRSA leaders announced the latest Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program data and participated in a roundtable discussion about HIV care, treatment and prevention services provided by the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program and the HRSA-funded Health Center Program in Southeast D.C. | HRSAs HIV/AIDS Bureau Associate Administrator Dr. Laura Cheever served as co-chair for the 2023 Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program (RWHAP) Clinical Conference from December 3-5, in Portland, Oregon. The conference provided the latest research, care, and treatment updates to more than 400 experienced clinical decision makers, including physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants, who provide day-to-day medical care and treatment for people with HIV and those integral to providing medical care in Ryan White HIV/AIDS Programfunded sites across the country. | HRSA staff recently participated in a conference hosted by the National Association of Community Health Centers for staff from Primary Care Associations and Health Center Controlled Networks. Attendees discussed issues like health equity and Uniform Data System (UDS) modernization. They also heard presentations on how their organizations can support health centers facing common challenges like recruitment and retention. Deputy Associate Administrator Tonya Bowers (center, front) joined the group photo. On Thursday, November 30, Associate Administrator Dr. Warren of the Maternal and Child Health Bureau spoke ata Maternal Mental Health Leadership Alliance (MMHLA) event to celebrate maternal mental health. MMHLA brought together Congressional members and their staff, federal employees, and people with lived experience to discuss strides being made in addressing maternal mental health and encourage further collaboration in reaching shared goals. Dr. Warren discussed HRSA's efforts to address maternal mental health, including the National Maternal Mental Health Hotline (1-833-TLC-MAMA) and the Screening and Treatment for Maternal Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder program. | HRSA recently updated its Field Strength and Students and Trainees Dashboards with new data for fiscal year 2023 for participants in these programs: National Health Service Corps Scholarship and Loan Repayment Programs Nurse Corps Scholarship and Loan Repayment Programs Substance Use Disorder Treatment and Recovery Loan Repayment Program Pediatric Specialty Loan Repayment Program You can use these dashboards to visualize clinician, student, and trainee data by program, discipline, location, and more. | Atlanta charity health center awarded for care quality, pandemic response Canton-Potsdam Hospital gets grant for maternal health Funds renewed to support primary care student recruitment Grant helps open doors for aspiring nurses in rural Maine Ochsner receives $1M to help combat opioid crisis in rural Louisiana Report offers a way to overcome the severe lack of HIV providers University of Alabama at Birmingham expands nurse-family partnerships to increase maternal health outcomes University of Louisville secures $6.5 million to enhance training for nursing professionals | | |