Marcus J. Hopkins Marcus J. Hopkins

The Time Has Come to Centralize HIV Services in West Virginia

My name is Marcus J. Hopkins, and I have been living with HIV since 2005. While I’m not considered a “long-term survivor” of HIV—a term deservedly ascribed to People Living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) since the 1980s or 1990s—my experiences receiving treatment for HIV through the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program (RWHAP) and AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP) have run an interesting gamut across five states: Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, California, and West Virginia. Across those five states, I have experienced a wide variety of HIV services provision over the course of being in HIV treatment since 2007, and can truly attest to the adage, “When you’ve seen one ADAP, you’ve seen one ADAP.”

Over the course of sixteen years of receiving services through the RWHAP and ADAP programs, several things have changed:

  • Providers no longer wait until a patient receives an AIDS diagnosis to initiate HIV Antiretroviral Therapy (ART)

  • Treatment regimens have largely transformed from multi-pill regimens to single-pill regimens and even long-term injections requiring once monthly or every other month injections

  • The emergence of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP)—a once-daily pill or once-monthly or every other month injection to prevent the transmission of HIV between serodiscordant sex partners—means that the possibility of no new diagnoses is a distinct possibility within our lifetimes

  • The threat of waiting lists to receive treatment and services is largely a thing of the past

  • The passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA, or “Obamacare”) allowed state ADAP programs to pay the premiums and co-pays for private insurance for eligible clients

  • The passage of the ACA also allowed states to expand Medicaid in such a way that PLWHA are now automatically covered by state Medicaid programs, rather than ADAP. To date, 39 states have expanded their Medicaid programs (Kaiser Family Foundation, 2022)

And yet, despite all of these advancements, issues remain, particularly in rural parts of the country where even basic medical services are limited, much less HIV-specific services. Such is the case for my home state of West Virginia.

Since returning to West Virginia from Los Angeles in 2013, my experience with this state’s HIV services has been…fraught, at best. I can’t complain about the quality of care I’ve received, here; I can say that qualifying and recertifying for the various RWHAP parts is made extremely cumbersome.

You see, in the state of West Virginia, there is one organization that handles Ryan White Part B (basically, the ADAP program) for the entirety of the state. This entity is separate from the clinics that provide Part C and Part D services (outpatient care and the provision of medical care and support services for low-income women, children, and youths with HIV and their families, respectively). And THOSE entities are entirely separate from the Part F services, which cover education, HIV treatment projects, dental programs, and the Minority AIDS Initiative. And even THOSE entities are entirely separate from the ones that provide services for the Housing Opportunities for People with AIDS (HOPWA) program that provides various housing and utility assistance services for PLWHA.

So, let’s do a quick recap: in order to receive the full breadth of services to which most PLWHA are eligible in the state of West Virginia, one must engage with at least four separate entities. This doesn’t even address nutrition assistance, non-emergency medical transportation for visits, and other supportive services.

This is a problem.

It is a problem for patients; it a problem for providers; it is a problem for the HIV Care Continuum (United States Department of Health and Human Services, 2021); it is a problem for HIV surveillance and prevention.

As far as I can tell, this problem seems kind of unique to West Virginia. West Virginia never saw the proliferation of AIDS Service Organizations (ASOs) that most of the rest of the country saw during the 1990s and early-2000s. While the rest of the country and especially surrounding states saw an influx of new 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations and clinics step in to provide the wide swath of HIV case management, clinical, behavioral health, and supportive services, West Virginia’s services developed in inefficient siloes that left patients scrambling to figure out the veritable pantheon of providers necessary to get the services for which they are eligible.

By comparison, in the northeastern region of the state of Tennessee (still deep in Appalachia), Ryan White caseworkers went out of their way to assist with every aspect of HIV care, from enrollment in the program to clinical services to mental health services to dental services to HOPWA services to enrolling in nutrition assistance programs—they did it all. The same was true of my experiences in California and Florida.

In West Virginia, however, every aspect of seeking and qualifying for HIV services requires patients to perform an intricate and ever-changing ballet, the steps for which they are never taught. Because there are so few providers of these services, when patients experience issues, there aren’t really any other avenues to turn to for assistance.

This has become the case with one of West Virginia’s terribly mismanaged HOPWA grantees.

Again, unlike virtually every other state in the U.S., HOPWA services in West Virginia are not seated within the HIV treatment and services infrastructure, insufficient as it is, but within various organizations dealing with homelessness, such as Covenant House and the West Virginia Coalition to End Homelessness. Comparatively, in other states, referral to and enrollment in the HOPWA program is handled by ASOs, who work in concert with state housing agencies to assist with housing issues.

Over the course of the past few years, when one of West Virginia’s HOPWA service providers stopped paying housing and utility payments in a timely manner, patients had nowhere to turn without having to go through multiple channels to resolve their issues…but not even really resolve them; just lodge a complaint. Those HOPWA clients would have had to complain, first, to the very agency that failed to return their panicked calls, as they lost their housing or their electricity was cut off; instead, they had to jump through several different hoops just to find out where to go to complain—the regional office in Pittsburgh, PA, which initiated an investigation which, frankly, doesn’t do anything for those who are trying to get their rent paid or their electricity reconnected.

The time has come for the formation of not one, but several ASOs in the state of West Virginia to centralize these services. It is unconscionable that a state with a burgeoning HIV infection rate should have such a disorganized and disjointed service provision landscape. The time has come to centralize services at these ASOs, lest we continue to beat numerous dead horses and fail to serve those living with HIV.

 

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