Modeling Navigation: Hepatitis C Toolkit for Improving Care for People Who Use Drugs
In September 2020, our friends at the National Association of State and Territorial AIDS Directors announced the launch of a new hepatitis C toolkit and navigation model to improve care for people who use drugs (PWUD) and other impacted populations. NASTAD, in partnership with the New York City Health Department, spent 8 years developing this model of care navigation and the associated toolkit and has made an informational training video available to preview the program for interested health departments, providers, and community-based organizations.
The model builds upon what’s now common knowledge: clients often need help navigating complex systems of care, an influx of information, and available support. NASTAD’s training video walks viewers (and prospective partners) through nearly every aspect of the model, from staffing needs to potential funding sources. While standard roles are as expected, including program managers and data personnel, rather than strictly relying on peers, the toolkit specifically delineates between “peer navigators” and “patient navigators”, including suggested job descriptions and distinctions on educational requirements. Notably, the peer role works to support the activities of the patient navigator role (as opposed to supporting case management work directly, as seen in many HIV peer programs). Entities considering the model should note: combining these roles may weaken the efficacy of the program and, given role descriptions, overburden staff assigned to the task. Further, for these roles to be effective, providers will need to be comfortable with an active navigator advocating for and with a client. Those same providers should also note, both navigators are designed to support positive health outcomes for clients and to work in tandem with a client’s provider, including medication adherence support, follow up with provider instructions, and to ensure appointments are attended.
NASTAD’s model envisions a comprehensive approach of assessment beginning at the time of contact (either during outreach or testing activities) and throughout the care continuum. From education to treatment preparedness, the model’s training curriculum and suggested documents prompt both types of navigators to consider their language, a client’s needs in housing, stress management, co-occurring health issues, and encourage actively linking clients to resources that are not necessarily medically based. The model supports this approach from the very design of the program – highlighting the success of (and need for) syringe services programs (SSPs), medication assisted treatment (MAT), addressing maintenance of contact with a client regardless of housing status, and instructing administrators on the necessity of a robust referral network.
The virtual training includes recognition of barriers and evaluation of a case study during COVID. NASTAD notes stigma, access to care, language access, and medication prior authorization are the most common barriers to engagement, retention, and success in care. Challenges include, as we previously noted, a COVID-associated plummet in HCV testing, changes in working hours, the need to access facilities with ever changing rules of access, and technology barriers, especially for homeless clients. Successes include easier access to treatment thanks to flexibilities in insurance approvals, more easily tracking down and following up with clients thanks to “stay-at-home” orders, and easier contact tracing.
Resources at the end of the training materials are either national or based in/from New York City and prospective partners will need to consider adding to or substituting this resource list with their own, more local resources. NASTAD encourages accessing the program’s technical assistance and capacity building assistance teams and those of partners involved in developing program materials (also found in the resources section of the materials).
This model poses an opportunity that may only be limited by the will power of funders and willingness to collaborate in an environment where community-based organizations are encouraged to be everything to everyone. Funders should take note of the extraordinary potential NASTAD’s model offers and support both entities seeking to implement it and those entities implementing partners would need to rely on in order to fulfill the wrap around nature of care and navigation the model envisions.