At the end of the following conference sessions, participants will be able meet the objectives listed below. General Session I: Opening Session

Similar documents
Tuberculosis Prevention and Control Protocol, 2018

Prevent the transmission of tuberculosis (TB) and cure individuals with active TB disease

Prevent the transmission of tuberculosis (TB) and cure individuals with active TB disease

Diana Fortune, RN, BSN has the following disclosures to make:

Partnerships for Success: Laboratories and Programs Meeting the Challenge. Partnerships During a TB Outbreak

Tuberculosis Case Management for Removable Alien Inmates/Detainees in Federal Custody

KEY ACTIVITIES IN TB CONTROL. Using Epidemiology for Data-Driven Decision-Making in Tuberculosis Programs February 24, 2016

Florida Tuberculosis System of Care

CDPH - CTCA Joint Guidelines Guidelines for the Follow-Up and Assessment of Persons with Class A/B Tuberculosis

Responsibilities of Public Health Departments to Control Tuberculosis

Contextualising the End TB Strategy for a Push toward TB Elimination in Kerala. Sunil Kumar

Initiating a Contact Investigation

PROJECT GRANTS AND COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS FOR TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL PROGRAMS TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL PROGRAMS

Programmatic Management of MDR-TB in China: Progress, Plan and Challenge

New Jersey Administrative Code Department of Health and Senior Services Title 8, Chapter 57, Communicable Disease

Overview: TB Case Management and Contact Investigation

Infectious Diseases-HAI, Infectious Diseases Connecticut Department of Public Health, Infectious Disease: Healthcare Associated Infections, STD/TB

The Role of Public Health in the Management of Tuberculosis

Tuberculosis: Surveillance and the Health Care Worker

Contact Hours (CME version ONLY) Suggested Target Audience. all clinical and allied patient care staff. all clinical and allied patient care staff

Patient Safety Course Descriptions

A university wishing to have an accredited program in adult Infectious Diseases must also sponsor an accredited program in Internal Medicine.

Checklists for screening for active tuberculosis in high-risk groups

NTNC: TB Program Core Competencies for PH Nurses 2008 and Future Challenges

Fundamentals of Nursing Case Management

Learning Objectives. John T. Mather Memorial Hospital

BC Strategic Plan for Tuberculosis Prevention, Treatment and Control 2016 Status Report

PROJECT GRANTS AND COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS FOR TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL PROGRAMS TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL PROGRAMS

Terms of Reference Kazakhstan Health Review of TB Control Program

Investigating Clostridium difficile Infections

902 KAR 20:200. Tuberculosis (TB) testing for residents in long-term care settings.

Practical Aspects of TB Infection Control

Mahoning County. TUBERCULOSIS ELIMINATION PLAN Mahoning County General Health District Board of Health Edition

Marianne Henry PHASE Practicum Presentation Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health May 12, 2017

FEDERAL MINISTRY OF HEALTH NATIONAL TUBERCULOSIS AND LEPROSY CONTROL PROGRAMME TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR ZONAL CONSULTANTS MARCH, 2017

Infection Control and Tuberculosis in Perú Lessons Learned

RISK CONTROL SOLUTIONS

BEST PRACTICE FOR THE CARE OF PATIENTS WITH TUBERCULOSIS

PROJECT GRANTS AND COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS FOR TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL PROGRAMS TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL PROGRAMS

Facility Tuberculosis (TB) Risk Assessment for Correctional Facilities

A people-centred model of TB care

Hello. Welcome to this webinar titled Preventing and Controlling Tuberculosis in Correctional Settings.

Non Hispanic Black Population- Percent of State Morbidity

Public Health/Primary Care Collaboration: Success Strategies in Denver

Strategy of TB laboratories for TB Control Program in Developing Countries

TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION CONTROL

Changing the paradigm of Programmatic Management of Drug-resistant TB

TB Elimination. Respiratory Protection in Health-Care Settings

Tuberculosis (TB) risk assessment worksheet

ERN Assessment Manual for Applicants

POSITION DESCRIPTION

Federal Training Centers Collaborative (FTCC) Overview

Required Local Public Health Activities

HealthStream Ambulatory Regulatory Course Descriptions

Federal Training Centers Collaborative (FTCC) Overview

902 KAR 20:205. Tuberculosis (TB) testing for health care workers.

Experiences from Peru; What have we learned? Dr. Martin Yagui Moscoso

Business Coalitions- Mediators for TB care and control

Philippine Strategic TB Elimination Plan: Phase 1 (PhilSTEP1)

Tuberculosis as an Occupational Disease. Molebogeng Malotle

Challenges for National Large Laboratories to Ensure Implementation of ELR Meaningful Use

Applied Research, Community Health Epidemiology, and Surveillance (ARCHES) Update

SASKATCHEWAN PROVINCIAL TUBERCULOSIS STRATEGY

Malawi Outpatient HIV Clinic Curriculum

TB Framework for Scotland

Epidemiological review of TB disease in Sierra Leone

An Evaluation of the Use of Video Technology in DOT for TB Treatment

WHO Task Force Framework on assessment of surveillance data - Revisiting the "Onion model" Ana Bierrenbach WHO / STB /TME June 2010

FAST. A Tuberculosis Infection Control Strategy. cough

STANDARDS OF CARE HIV AMBULATORY OUTPATIENT MEDICAL CARE STANDARDS I. DEFINITION OF SERVICES

Management of patients with TB/HIV Gunta Kirvelaite

Inventory of Biological Specimens, Registries, and Health Data and Databases REPORT TO THE LEGISLATURE

WHO in the Philippines

Frequently Asked Questions about TB Protocols at Duke Hospital and Clinics ( Revision)

Leaving on a jet plane: My patient is leaving. What do I do?

FY2019 President s Budget Proposal NACCHO Priority Public Health Program Funding - February 2018

FEDERAL MINISTRY OF HEALTH DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH. National Tuberculosis and Leprosy Control Programme. A Tuberculosis Infection Control Strategy

Yale New Haven Health System Center for Healthcare Solutions

TB in Alameda County & Zika Update

Executive summary. 1. Background and organization of the meeting

TUBERCULOSIS CONTROL RESEARCH MATRIX

Stark State College Policies and Procedures Manual

Number: Ratio of the airflow to the space volume per unit time, usually expressed as the number of air changes per hour.

Kaiser Permanente Research A Very Brief Introduction

Copy. RECORDS RETENTION SCHEDULE Department of Public Health- Infectious Disease RECORDS RETENTION SCHEDULE#

ATTACHMENT II EXHIBIT II-C Effective Date: February 1, 2018 HIV/AIDS SPECIALTY PLAN

Tricks of the Trade: Strategies for Pediatric TB Case Management

IHF Training Manual for TB and MDR-TB Control for Hospital/Clinic/Health Facility Managers Executive Summary 2

Risk of TB infection among HCWs in the era of HIV and MDR-TB. Madhukar Pai, MD, PhD Assistant Professor of Epidemiology McGill University Montreal

University of Michigan Health System Internal Medicine Residency. Infectious Diseases Curriculum: Ambulatory ID

Call: Visit:

Implementation of QuantiFERON-TB Gold in Public Health Laboratories

How Do We Define Adherence? Improving Adherence to TB Treatment. Broad View of Adherence. What is adherence?

TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION CONTROL PROGRAM

2012 TB Laboratory Specimen Referral, Reporting & Transportation for diagnosis and management of MDR TB (January to June 2012)

GOALS AND OBJECTIVES FOR AUTOPSY PATHOLOGY

REPOSITIONING OUR CLINICAL LABORATORIES FOR EFFECTIVE AND EFFICIENT HEALTHCARE DELIVERY. By Prof. Ibironke Akinsete Chairman PathCare Nigeria

Kentucky TB Prevention & Control Program. Special Edition

Infection Prevention and Control: How to Meet the Conditions of Participation for Home Health

Monday, July 23, 2018*

Transcription:

OBJECTIVES 2017 National TB Conference: Culture of Collaboration April 19 21, 2017 At the end of the following conference sessions, participants will be able meet the objectives listed below. General Session I: Opening Session 1. Give a high level summary of the domestic and global epidemiology of tuberculosis (TB) to inform strategic planning to control and eliminate TB in communities in the United States. 2. Identify where funding gaps exist for TB programs and research and development on TB to inform strategic planning to control and eliminate TB in communities in the United States. 3. Recognize the psycho social impacts of TB on patients from the account of a TB survivor to improve patient care and outcomes. 4. Identify the systemic issues involved in TB elimination to inform strategic planning to improve patient care and protect public health. 5. Describe a methodology and approach to increasing collaboration with other community based providers to improve patient care and better protect the public s health. General Session II: TB in Motion: Prevention and Cure 1. Describe the current trends in TB mortality and morbidity globally, including challenges of drugresistant TB diagnosis and treatment, and the impact of comorbidities such as diabetes and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection to strategize to overcome these challenges to improve patient care. 2. Describe the World Health Organization (WHO)/Stop TB global TB elimination goals, recent TB research findings, and program initiatives to help accelerate global response to TB. 3. Describe the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Global Migration and Quarantine TB activities including overseas TB screening policies and coordination with domestic TB programs around cases travelling to and from their jurisdictions and how these initiatives may lead to improved patient outcomes. 2017 National TB Conference Objectives Page 1 of 5

4. Describe the current population based screening effort in Ebeye and other Pacific Islands and how this complements TB control activities among high risk populations in the United States to prevent TB. 5. Describe the outcomes of TB screening and latent TB treatment of refugees in ten TB Epidemiologic Studies Consortium (TBESC) program sites throughout the United States to improve TB prevention among these populations. Lunchtime Session: TB Screening in US Healthcare Workers: Updating the Guidelines in a World of Alternative Facts 1. Describe the objectives, PICOTS questions, and methods for updating the guidelines to inform TB screening practices for healthy workplaces and communities. 2. Discuss proposed changes to the recommendations for TB screening of US healthcare workers to improve TB screening practices for healthy workplaces and communities. General Session III: TB Infection 1. Describe and compare the performance characteristics of tuberculin skin tests (TSTs) and interferon gamma release assays (IGRAs) in a selected US study population at high risk of TB infection to inform program strategies and clinical diagnostic decision making. 2. Describe how latent class analysis can be used to estimate true TB infection prevalence and performance characteristics of each of the tests to inform program strategies and clinical diagnostic decision making. 3. Describe how mathematical modeling and the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention Epidemiologic and Economic Modeling Agreement (NEEMA) project may inform TB program strategies to eliminate TB in the future. 4. Describe three state level approaches to implementing TB infection surveillance to identify TB infection in the community and enhance TB prevention. 5. Explain challenges and potential solutions to implementation of TB infection surveillance to identify TB infection in the community and improve TB prevention. 6. Detail programmatic uses of TB infection surveillance data that may improve TB elimination efforts by identifying opportunities to prevent progression to disease and its subsequent transmission. General Session IV: Sub culturing: Working with Lab Partners 1. Describe the sequence of events that led to a multi state investigation of TB laboratory falsepositive results, noting opportunities to improve diagnosis and patient outcomes. 2. Identify elements of an effective protocol to identify potential false positive TB laboratory results to improve diagnosis and patient outcomes. 3. Describe the laboratory protocol utilized by New York City Department of Health and how this protocol may improve practices in their local jurisdictions 4. Identify the differences and similarities of state public health laboratories and clinical commercial laboratories, noting opportunities to improve diagnosis and patient outcomes. 5. List steps that health departments can take to increase collaboration with clinical commercial laboratories to improve patient care. 2017 National TB Conference Objectives Page 2 of 5

General Session V: Understanding Transmission to Strengthen TB Elimination Efforts 1. Discuss factors that drive transmission of TB and discuss approaches for addressing these elements at the local level to decrease transmission in the community. 2. Describe national approaches for genotyping TB to decrease transmission in the community. 3. Describe national approaches for assessing recent transmission of TB to decrease transmission in the community. 4. Identify lessons learned from programmatic investigations of transmission at the local level and examine how those lessons might be applied to improve TB elimination efforts. Breakout Session B1: TB in Motion: Prevention and Cure 1. Describe local TB program experiences in evaluating refugees and immigrants with class B TB and how these experiences may inform their practice. 2. Describe local TB control program initiatives with civil surgeons to effectively diagnose and treat TB infection in a timely manner. 3. Discuss experiences collaborating with other countries in completing TB treatment for persons who move during treatment, including interjurisdictional notifications and the role of specific programs such as CureTB and how this enhances continuity of care for patients. Breakout Session B2: TB Infection 1. Provide input on modeling questions and parameters, with a TB program perspective to improve population level TB outcomes (e.g., increased TB prevention and/or decreased TB transmission within vulnerable populations). 2. Describe how local health departments can partner with community clinics to improve TB prevention to reach out to providers of care serving high risk populations so that TB prevention efforts may be increased, benefiting the patient population by decreasing the burden of TB. Breakout Session B3: Sub culturing: Working with Lab Partners 1. Describe problems that may be encountered when working with reference laboratories (e.g., confusing, delayed, or incorrect reports; difficulties obtaining specimens or isolates) and strategize how to overcome these challenges to improve patient care. 2. Identify strategies to recognize possible laboratory reporting errors to inform clinical decisionmaking and improve patient care. 3. Discuss examples of successful communication systems between state, commercial, and federal laboratories including the implementation of an electronic reporting system designed to improve the clear, accurate communication of laboratory results to improve patient care. Breakout Session B4: Understanding Transmission to Strengthen TB Elimination Efforts 1. Describe plans for sharing of genomic data and algorithms for recent transmission to receive feedback and potentially identify areas for modification to decrease transmission in the community. 2. Explain approaches for programmatic intervention during complicated contact investigations to prevent transmission of multidrug resistant TB. 2017 National TB Conference Objectives Page 3 of 5

3. Describe the use of whole genome sequencing in combination with clinical and epidemiological data for prioritization of outbreak investigations to decrease TB transmission in the community. 4. Describe how untreated latent TB infection can impact a large contact investigation, noting the missed opportunities to decrease transmission in the community. Breakout Session B5: On the Horizon: New and Improved Diagnostics for TB and Molecular Drug Susceptibility Testing Not Yet Online 1. Describe the operation, interpretation of results, and potential patient benefits of the Hain Line Probe assays for TB. 2. Describe potential benefits of the new GeneXpert cartridge for TB diagnosis and determination of multiple drug susceptibilities. Breakout Session C1: TB in Motion: Prevention and Cure 1. Describe local TB program experiences in evaluating refugees and immigrants with class B TB and how these experiences may inform their practice. 2. Describe local TB control program initiatives with civil surgeons to effectively diagnose and treat TB infection in a timely manner. 3. Discuss experiences collaborating with other countries in completing TB treatment for persons who move during treatment, including interjurisdictional notifications and the role of specific programs such as CureTB and how this enhances continuity of care for patients. Breakout Session C2: TB Infection 1. Recognize the advantages and disadvantages of potential mechanisms for collecting and reporting surveillance data for TB infection to improve TB prevention. 2. Understand basic medical issues to be addressed with an individual patient starting 3HP and use this information to improve patient outcomes. Breakout Session C3: Sub culturing: Working with Lab Partners 1. Describe problems that may be encountered when working with reference laboratories (e.g., confusing, delayed, or incorrect reports; difficulties obtaining specimens or isolates) and strategize how to overcome these challenges to improve patient care. 2. Identify strategies to recognize possible laboratory reporting errors to inform clinical decisionmaking and improve patient care. 3. Discuss examples of successful communication systems between state, commercial, and federal laboratories including the implementation of an electronic reporting system designed to improve the clear, accurate communication of laboratory results to improve patient care. Breakout Session C4: Understanding Transmission to Strengthen TB Elimination Efforts 1. Describe plans for sharing of genomic data and algorithms for recent transmission to receive feedback and potentially identify areas for modification to decrease transmission in the community. 2. Explain approaches for programmatic intervention during complicated contact investigations to prevent transmission of multidrug resistant TB. 2017 National TB Conference Objectives Page 4 of 5

3. Describe the use of whole genome sequencing in combination with clinical and epidemiological data for prioritization of outbreak investigations to decrease TB transmission in the community. 4. Describe how untreated latent TB infection can impact a large contact investigation, noting the missed opportunities to decrease transmission in the community. Breakout Session C5: Video DOT for Treatment of TB 1. Describe various platforms available for remote video observed therapy for TB disease and, if appropriate, use this technology to enhance patient adherence. 2. Identify functional limitations and privacy issues of remote video observed therapy and determine if this technology is appropriate in their setting to improve TB control efforts. 3. Derive an economic evaluation for planning remote video observed therapy programs to determine their viability for local programs. General Session VI: Science and Technology in the Treatment of TB 1. Describe the spectrum of technologies available and their limitations for remote video observed therapy to improve patient adherence to TB treatment. 2. Describe the potential uses of new methods and data resources for molecular determination of drug resistance in designing effective treatment regimens for TB patients. 3. Identify alterations in immune and inflammatory pathways in Diabetes mellitus and their implications for more effectively treating TB disease. 2017 National TB Conference Objectives Page 5 of 5