Ending the HIV Epidemic: HIV Treatment for Rural Communities of the Southeast US

Thursday, April 17, 2025 (All day) to Friday, May 9, 2025 (All day)
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A Two-Part Training Series for Providers in the Southeast

Learning Objectives for the Series:

  1. Evaluate ART regimens based on their efficacy, safety, adherence potential, and drug-drug interactions 
  2. Employ strategies to improve rapid ART initiation in rural communities
  3. Apply clinical evidence, guideline recommendations, and patient-specific factors into individualized treatment selection for people with HIV
  4. Develop monitoring and follow-up care plans for people with HIV based on the latest guideline recommendations and best practices 
  5. Utilize a multidisciplinary approach for optimizing HIV management, reducing stigma, and engaging rural populations in HIV care and treatment 

Integrate evidence-based interprofessional strategies to improve retention in HIV care and adherence among rural communities

Presented By:

Paul Edward Sax, MD
Clinical Director, Infectious Disease Clinic
Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School

Cody A. Chastain, MD, FACP, FIDSA
Assistant Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases
Assistant Dean of Undergraduate Medical Education Program Evaluation and Improvement
Principal Investigator, Southeast AIDS Education and Training Center
Vanderbilt School of Medicine | Vanderbilt University Medical Center

This activity is designed for primary care clinicians, nurses, pharmacists, and social workers/case managers, and other members of the healthcare team who serve patients in rural areas in the Southeast.

Each session confers up to two hours of Continuing Medical, Nursing, Pharmacy, or Social Work credit (AMA/ANCC/APCE). This is a two-part series: please register for both sessions.

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