TasP® Collaborations
John Ruedy Clinic (JRC)
TasP® International Workshop
The International HIV Treatment as Prevention® Workshop is an annual meeting that brings together academic, policy, industry, and community representatives to review and discuss research and policy progress in the field of HIV Treatment as Prevention®.
First held in 2011, the Treatment as Prevention® Workshop was hosted by the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, and co-hosted by the International AIDS Society, Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, World Health Organization, and National Institute on Drug Abuse.
The Treatment as Prevention® Workshop is a single track meeting with daily plenary, debates, oral abstract, and poster sessions. Each oral session has abundant time dedicated to open discussion, providing an opportunity for participants to share their experience to date, as well as protocols, preliminary findings, and future plans and needs.
Over the past number of years, the Division of AIDS at the University of British Columbia (DAIDS-UBC), the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS (BC-CfE), and a number of international partners have coordinated the highly impactful series of International HIV Treatment as Prevention® Workshops, which have contributed to building consensus around the importance of scaling up this life-saving intervention to attain the 90-90-90 targets by 2020. Following discussions between DAIDS-UBC, BC-CfE, and the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care (IAPAC), a decision has been taken to transition the coordination of the Workshop to IAPAC.
We are pleased to confirm that the Workshop is now being hosted by IAPAC immediately preceding IAS 2017 in Paris. IAPAC will work with members of the Workshop’s Scientific Advisory Committee to design a robust, forward-leaning program that helps to continue our forward momentum toward attaining decisive, measureable targets.
Further details and updates can be found on this website and at http://www.iapac.org.
Urban Health Acute Care Unit
The Urban Health Acute Care Unit at St. Paul’s Hospital is a 24 bed unit that provides acute hospital care for patients with infectious diseases, addiction, HIV/AIDS, and chronic/acute illness associated with marginalization. Previously the unit served as the 10C HIV/AIDS Ward, which operated from 1997 until 2014.
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Due to the success of the BC-CfE’s Treatment as Prevention® strategy, reducing new HIV diagnoses by approximately 80% from the peak in 1987, there was no longer a need for a dedicated AIDS ward after 2014. The area was refocused and renamed the Urban Health Acute Care Unit and in July of 2020, moved to Unit 8A in St. Paul’s.
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In addition to treating issues of HIV-related opportunistic infections or adverse reactions to HAART, physicians in the Unit are seeing more frequent injection drug use-related infections, such as cellulitis, endocarditis, osteomyelitis, and complications of chronic liver disease (e.g. hepatitis B and C). About 70% of the patients admitted to the Unit are active or previous injection drug users.
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The Urban Health Acute Care Unit provides a much-needed multidisciplinary service which is patient-centred, trauma-informed, and includes a progressive harm reduction approach to addictions management. The care team is particularly experienced in the management of infections among marginalized patients who are often underhoused and with few community supports. The unit has built up extensive linkages with other care facilities and support groups in the community.