Utilizing Policy and Electronic Health Record (EHR) System Modifications to Implement and Sustain Routine Opt-Out HIV Screening and Linkage to Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic

J Healthc Sci Humanit. 2021 Fall;11(1):84-100.

Abstract

The burden of HIV infection disproportionately impacts Black people across the United States. New York City (NYC) has taken substantial steps to End the HIV Epidemic, boasting reductions in new HIV infections by 40% since 2015; however, racial inequities persist. In 2019, Black people living in NYC accounted for 24% of the population, yet represented 46.1% of new HIV diagnoses and 48.7% of HIV deaths. To address the high incidence of HIV in a predominately Black community in Central Brooklyn, Brookdale Hospital Medical Center (BHMC) developed a multi-faceted approach to increase routine opt-out HIV screening and linkage. In order to integrate HIV testing into routine clinical care, BHMC leadership updated screening policies; developed an Electronic Health Record (EHR) algorithm to trigger HIV screening in five BHMC ambulatory clinics; and modified the EHR to transmit positive HIV screening results to patient navigators dedicated to linking patients to HIV care. During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, between March and April 2020, HIV screening across all five ambulatory sites decreased by 87.3%. After activation of the EHR algorithm in three ambulatory sites in June 2020, HIV screening increased 216.3% from the prior month. By the time the final EHR algorithm launched in August 2020, HIV testing had fully rebounded to pre-pandemic levels. Policies supporting routine opt-out HIV screening coupled with EHR-prompted screening can improve and sustain HIV testing in a Black community with a high incidence and prevalence of HIV.

Keywords: Black Community; COVID-19; EHR Modification; HIV; HIV Screening; Linkage to Care; Opt-out Consent; Patient Navigator; Policy Recommendations; Routine Screening.