Last data update: Aug 15, 2025. (Total: 49733 publications since 2009)
| Records 1-4 (of 4 Records) |
| Query Trace: Chavis C [original query] |
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| The Next-Generation Sequencing Quality Initiative and Challenges in Clinical and Public Health Laboratories
Cherney B , Diaz A , Chavis C , Ghattas C , Evans D , Arambula D , Stang H . Emerg Infect Dis 2025 31 (13) 14-17 The Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) Quality Initiative addresses laboratory challenges faced when performing NGS by developing tools and resources to build a robust quality management system. Here, we illustrate how those products support laboratories in navigating complex regulatory environments and quality-related challenges while implementing NGS effectively in an evolving landscape. |
| Closing the dissemination gap: Accessible toolkits for the rapid replication of evidence-informed interventions to improve health outcomes among people with HIV
Goldhammer H , Marc LG , Massaquoi M , Cancio R , Cahill S , Downes A , Rebchook G , Bourdeau B , Head J , Psihopaidas D , Chavis NS , Cohen SM , Mayer KH , Keuroghlian AS . AIDS Behav 2024 Despite advances in HIV care and treatment in the U.S., disparities in outcomes along the HIV care continuum persist. The widespread replication of effective and sustainable interventions that prioritize the engagement of underserved populations has been identified as a promising path to ending the HIV epidemic in the U.S. Intervention dissemination products, however, rarely provide the comprehensive and accessible information needed to replicate interventions within community settings. To bridge the divide between research and community-based implementation, the Using Evidence-informed Interventions to Improve Health Outcomes among People Living with HIV (E2i) initiative-grounded in the HIV/AIDS Bureau Implementation Science Framework-created a suite of tools to promote the rapid replication of interventions focused on transgender women, Black men who have sex with men, behavioral health integration, and identifying and addressing trauma. The resulting dissemination products are detailed and digestible multimedia toolkits that follow adult learning theory principles and align with the Template for Intervention Description and Replication criteria for adapting non-pharmacological interventions. Each E2i toolkit consists of five components: implementation guides, narrative videos of site implementation, best practice demonstration videos, interactive learning modules, and recruitment posters and brochures. Over 2 years (2022-2024), the E2i toolkit webpages amassed 7703 unique users and 17,666 pageviews. These toolkits can serve as a blueprint for designing comprehensive and accessible dissemination products for replication of HIV interventions in care settings. Dissemination products that bridge the gap between intervention research and replication in community settings are a crucial missing tool for ending the HIV epidemic. |
| Correction: A peer-to-peer collaborative learning approach for the implementation of evidence-informed interventions to improve HIV-related health outcomes
Keuroghlian AS , Marc L , Goldhammer H , Massaquoi M , Downes A , Stango J , Bryant H , Cahill S , Yen J , Perez AC , Head JM , Mayer KH , Myers J , Rebchook GM , Bourdeau B , Psihopaidas D , Chavis NS , Cohen SM . AIDS Behav 2024 |
| A peer-to-peer collaborative learning approach for the implementation of evidence-informed interventions to improve HIV-related health outcomes
Keuroghlian AS , Marc L , Goldhammer H , Massaquoi M , Downes A , Stango J , Bryant H , Cahill S , Yen J , Perez AC , Head JM , Mayer KH , Myers J , Rebchook GM , Bourdeau B , Psihopaidas D , Chavis NS , Cohen SM . AIDS Behav 2024 The nationwide scale-up of evidence-based and evidence-informed interventions has been widely recognized as a crucial step in ending the HIV epidemic. Although the successful delivery of interventions may involve intensive expert training, technical assistance (TA), and dedicated funding, most organizations attempt to replicate interventions without access to focused expert guidance. Thus, there is a grave need for initiatives that meaningfully address HIV health disparities while addressing these inherent limitations. Here, the Health Resources and Services Administration HIV/AIDS Bureau (HRSA HAB) initiative Using Evidence-Informed Interventions to Improve HIV Health Outcomes among People Living with HIV (E2i) piloted an alternative approach to implementation that de-emphasized expert training to naturalistically simulate the experience of future HIV service organizations with limited access to TA. The E2i approach combined the HAB-adapted Institute for Healthcare Improvement's Breakthrough Series Collaborative Learning Model with HRSA HAB's Implementation Science Framework, to create an innovative multi-tiered system of peer-to-peer learning that was piloted across 11 evidence-informed interventions at 25 Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program sites. Four key types of peer-to-peer learning exchanges (i.e., intervention, site, staff role, and organization specific) took place at biannual peer learning sessions, while quarterly intervention cohort calls and E2i monthly calls with site staff occurred during the action periods between learning sessions. Peer-to-peer learning fostered both experiential learning and community building and allowed site staff to formulate robust site-specific action plans for rapid cycle testing between learning sessions. Strategies that increase the effectiveness of interventions while decreasing TA could provide a blueprint for the rapid uptake and integration of HIV interventions nationwide. |
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- Page last updated:Aug 15, 2025
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