TEC News

TEC News

2017 USET GPRA Best Practices Conference

TEC Event, TEC News
United South and Eastern Tribes, Inc. (USET) hosted the 2017 USET Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) Best Practices Conference in Nashville, TN on March 14-15, 2017. This year’s conference had participation from 14 of the 26 USET member Tribal Nations. The conference focused on new and existing GPRA measures and topics such as reducing stress in the workplace, telehealth, and fitness and wellness programs.

 

Participants look forward to this conference every year because it is an opportunity for them to learn from and work with their peers to improve their programs.

 

By using feedback from previous conferences and collaborating with the Indian Health Service (IHS) Nashville Area Office and the Tribal Nation health clinics, USET is able to put together an agenda that is meaningful for the participants. The success of the conference is due to the hard work of USET and IHS staff and to the contributions and presentations from clinics in the area.

 

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UIHI Announces Partnership with Project Inform

TEC News

The Urban Indian Health Institute (UIHI) is excited to announce a formal partnership with Project Inform, a national HIV and hepatitis C advocacy and education organization based in San Francisco that:

  • Encourages the development of better treatments and cures for both HIV and hepatitis C.
  • Advocates for innovative, medically-based prevention strategies.
  • Provides up-to-date, life-saving information to help people living with HIV and hepatitis C make the best choices regarding their treatment and care.
  • Presses governments to set policies and assure unlimited access to affordable health care that will one day end the HIV and hepatitis C epidemics.

 

The UIHI and Project Inform are working together to culturally adapt patient education materials on pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a pill that prevents HIV infection in people at risk of becoming infected.

 

There is considerable need for PrEP patient education materials that include imagery and resources that are sensitive to the needs of American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/ANs). The UIHI and Project Inform look forward to a long-term relationship, with the ultimate goal of improving the health of AI/ANs. We’re eager to share the materials with clinics and programs in summer 2017!

 

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To learn more about Project Inform, please view the Project Inform Website »

 


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Bill Hall Honored with Adeline Garcia Community Service Award

TEC News
The Urban Indian Health Institute (UIHI) recently honored Bill Hall with an Adeline Garcia Community Services Award at Seattle Indian Health Board’s annual community celebration. Bill is a leader for Native organizations working to eliminate HIV in Indian Country. He is well known for his involvement in HIV issues in Washington State, and is well respected throughout the HIV community for giving voice to concerns affecting all people living with HIV. He provides a personalized perspective by openly sharing his experiences as a Native man living with HIV. He is a positive, motivated leader with amazing dedication.

During his time as a member of the defeatHIV Community Advisory Board (CAB), Bill has played an important role in volunteering for all outreach events to the staff. He has written for the defeatHIV newsletter an emotional accounting of his journey as a Native man living with HIV and what a cure for this infection would mean to him. As a resident of the Cal Anderson House – the first housing dedicated to people living with HIV in the country – Bill helped secure their community room for the CAB to hold its meetings. He has also invigorated the CAB’s membership by offering to cook a full dinner with dessert every month for HIV community members, many of whom would not be able to otherwise eat. In the words of Michael Louella, CAB Coordinator, “[Bill] is so vital for our CAB that it would be impossible for me to envision our group fulfilling its mission to mobilize researchers and community to work together to cure HIV without his constant and dedicated involvement.”

 

Bill exemplifies the traditional Native values of giving selflessly for the betterment of his community, both Native and non-Native.

 

Through his connection with Michael, Bill met with UIHI’s Director, Abigail Echo-Hawk, and expressed how important this work was to the local Native community. Through his continuous dedication he is now assisting and advising UIHI on creating materials about HIV prevention and stigma reduction for American Indian and Alaska Natives. He volunteers his time to steer us in the right direction following the traditional teachings of elders before him. Because of Bill, UIHI is creating materials and shaping our HIV program to become the leading Native organization working to eliminate HIV in Indian Country.

 

Pictured left to right are Chris Stearns (SIHB Board Chair), William Hall (Awardee) and Esther Lucero (SIHB CEO). [Photo credit: LaVerne Wise]

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UIHI and defeatHIV: A Brief Introduction to HIV Cure Research Webinar

TEC Event, TEC News
The Urban Indian Health Institute (UIHI) is excited to partner with the defeatHIV Community Advisory Board to honor National Native HIV/AIDS Awareness Day on Monday, March 20th, 2017. We will hold a webinar that will discuss HIV in American Indians and Alaska Natives, HIV cure research, and ways the community and researchers can work together.

Webinar Date and Time:
March 20, 2017
10:00-11:30 a.m. Pacific

Call-in-toll-free number: 1-866-325-4292 (US)
Conference Code: 253 140 7682

Register for the Webinar

Online announcement

 

Defeat HIV

UIHI Logo

Online Polling Helps Set Tribal Public Health Priorities

TEC News
The United South and Eastern Tribes, Inc., (USET) Tribal Epidemiology Center (TEC) held its annual advisory committee meeting on October 24, 2016. The advisory committee meeting was a part of USET’s Annual Meeting that was hosted by the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians at the beautiful Harrah’s Cherokee Resort and Casino in North Carolina.

In order to facilitate in-depth discussions and better understand the advisory committee’s logic in identifying priorities, the TEC staff utilized an online polling system that allowed for real-time voting via text messaging (https://www.polleverywhere.com).

 

Prior to the meeting, TEC staff reviewed grant requirements and previous advisory committee input to develop a list of proposed activities for the 2016-17 grant year.

 

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At the meeting, advisory committee members were given a handout that outlined the proposed activities and were asked to vote on the following questions:

  • Which of these has been or will be the most useful to you?
  • Which of these best tie into your Tribal Nation goals?
  • Which of these is least useful to you?

The poll displayed immediate visual results, allowed committee members to make changes to their answers, and prompted discussion of the results. Based on the responses, the TEC was able to dig deeper and ask probing questions such as:

  • Why has a particular activity been the most/least useful to you?
  • Is there something the TEC can do to make an activity even more useful?
  • How can the TEC make an activity better align with your overall Tribal Nation goals?

This method allowed TEC staff to learn many important details regarding the needs of the Tribal Nations. Advisory committee members reported that they liked the format, and the TEC staff felt that they were more engaged in the meeting than ever before.

The TEC staff is now well positioned to meet these needs and to help improve health among the Tribal Nations for the upcoming grant year. The TEC plans to utilize the online polling system in future meetings to engage the audience for more in-depth discussions and to make the decision-making process more productive.