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The
Community
Health
Awareness
Group
will
include
bi-monthly
pop-up
clinics
in areas
of
Detroit
where
there
are few
resources,
but
where
the
target
population
is
found. |
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Community
Health
Awareness
Group
awarded
$1M HRSA
Grant to
fight
COVID-19
in
underserved
communities
The
program
will aim
to boost
COVID-19
vaccine
confidence
among
African-American
Men who
have sex
with
Men,
Persons
Who
Inject
Drugs
and
transgender
individuals
DETROIT
– The
Community
Health
Awareness
Group
(CHAG)
today
announced
it has
received
a $1
million
one-year
grant
from the
Health
Resources
and
Services
Administration
(HRSA)
to boost
COVID-19
vaccine
confidence
and
increase
vaccination
rates in
local
underserved
communities.
The
grant
will
support
a
COVID-19
vaccine
access
program
specifically
designed
to
bridge
the
vaccine
hesitancy
gap
among
underserved
populations
in
Detroit,
including
but not
limited
to those
who are
medically
vulnerable,
poor,
lack
access
to
medical
services,
African
American
Men who
have Sex
with Men
(MSM),
Persons
Who
Inject
Drugs
(PWID)
and
transgender
individuals.
The
announcement
was made
today by
Cindy
Bolden
Calhoun,
CHAG
Executive
Director
and CFO.
The
City of
Detroit
has been
described
as an
island
of
vaccine
hesitancy.
While 54
percent
of
Michigan
residents
received
their
first
dose of
the
COVID-19
vaccine
by July
30, only
33
percent
of those
in
Detroit
had
received
the
first
vaccine
dose
according
to the
Michigan
COVID-19
dashboard.
In April
2020,
Gov.
Gretchen
Whitmer
established
the
Michigan
Coronavirus
Task
Force on
Racial
Disparities
when
African
Americans
represented
nearly
14
percent
of the
state’s
population,
yet they
represented
40
percent
of the
deaths
from
COVID-19.
A
recent
report
by The
Brookings
Institution,
Examining
and
Addressing
COVID-19
Racial
Disparities
in
Detroit,
addressed
how
poverty,
household
issues
and
evictions,
and
access
to
healthcare
disproportionately
affect
the
health
outcomes
of
Blacks
in
Detroit.
“This
funding
will
allow us
to
mobilize
community
advocates
and
health
workers,
along
with our
trained
clinical
staff
who have
become a
trusted
voice in
our
community,
to
tackle
vaccine
hesitancy
and do
our part
to fight
this
pandemic,”
said
Bolden
Calhoun.
“At a
time
when the
Delta
variant
has
continued
to
spread
at an
alarming
rate
nationwide,
our
outreach
efforts
will
directly
benefit
those in
the
community
who are
typically
at
greater
risk for
COVID-19
infection,
serious
illness
and even
death.”
According
to the
Michigan
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
(MDHHS),
roughly
0.4
percent
of
Detroit's
population
is Young
Black
MSM
(YBMSM)
(4 in
1,000),
but in
2017, 38
percent
of new
HIV
diagnoses
were
among
YBMSM.
New HIV
infections
continue
to be
predominantly
men who
have sex
with men
(MSM),
black
persons,
and
persons
aged
20-29 at
the time
of HIV
diagnosis.
MDHHS
records
show
that STD
diagnosis
in
Detroit
far
surpasses
statewide
numbers:
chlamydia
infection
in
Detroit
is
1,663.36
per
100,000,
more
than
triple
the
state
rate;
gonorrhea
infection
is
nearly
five
times
higher
in
Detroit
at
870.86
per
100,000;
and the
rate of
primary
and
secondary
syphilis
in
Detroit
is 37.46
per
100,000;
nearly
five and
a half
times
higher
than the
state
rate.
Detroit
is the
second
poorest
big city
in the
nation
with a
poverty
rate
nearly
three
times
the
national
average—
roughly
35
percent
with a
child
poverty
rate
more
than 50
percent.
Before
the
pandemic,
the
city’s
unemployment
rate was
9.8
percent.
Four in
10
working
Detroiters
remained
laid-off,
according
to the
U.S
Bureau
of Labor
Statistics
with a
jobless
rate of
39.2
percent.
“Due to
the
target
population’s
high
level of
distrust
for the
medical
establishment,
and
their
willingness
to
engage
with
CHAG’s
reflective
staff,
we will
utilize
a mobile
medical
clinic
where
clients
can
receive
the
vaccination
when
they are
ready.
The
project
also
will
include
bi-monthly
pop-up
clinics
in areas
of
Detroit
where
there
are few
resources,
but
where
the
target
population
is
found,”
said
Bolden
Calhoun.
CHAG
has a
35-year
history
of
effectively
reaching
“hidden
populations”
by going
to where
clients
are and
linking
them to
testing,
treatment
and
care.
CHAG
will use
the HRSA
grant
funding
to adapt
three of
its most
successful
CDC
evidence-based
interventions
which
rely on
mobilizing
Community
Advocates
(CA),
and
Community
Health
Workers
(CHW) –
PROMISE
(Peers
Reaching
Out and
Modeling
Intervention
Strategies)
a
community
level
intervention,
Anti-Retroviral
Treatment
and
Access
to
Services
(ARTAS)
and the
Social
Network
Strategy
(SNS).
Comprehensive
outreach
funded
by the
HRSA
grant
will be
launched
to reach
individuals
where
they are
and via
the most
effective
communication
methods,
including
community
engagement
and
advocacy;
social
media
where
role
model
stories
can be
shared
on
TikTok
and
YouTube;
educational
messaging
shared
through
community
partners,
social
media
platforms
and
traditional
news
media.
CHAG
is a
recognized
leader
in
reaching
high-risk
communities
through
culturally
appropriate
and
ethnically
sensitive
means.
It was
the
first
organization
in
Detroit
to
develop
and
implement
an
alternative
source
of AIDS
education
and
information
within
the
African-American
community.
The
nonprofit
ensures
materials
are
linguistically
and
educationally
appropriate;
utilizes
interventions
proven
effective
with
poor,
inner-city,
substance-using
African-Americans;
and goes
to where
clients
are to
link
them
services.
CHAG’s
wraparound
services
are
designed
to
promote
and
implement
positive
health
strategies
to
influence
the
overall
quality
of life
of the
African-American
community.
In
addition
to the
COVID-19
vaccine
access
project
funded
by HRSA,
CHAG
also
offers:
• Free
integrated
communicable
disease
testing
and
treatment,
including
HIV,
STIs and
viral
hepatitis
•
Pre-Exposure
Prophylaxis
(PrEP)
appointments
for
persons
at-risk
for HIV,
including
HIV/STD
testing,
physician
visit
and a
prescription
for PrEP
Services
include
insurance
enrollment,
and
linkage
to other
HIV
prevention
services.
• Life
Points
Harm
Reduction
Outreach
Program
which
provides
clean
sterile
syringes,
condoms,
cookers,
cotton,
bleach,
and
other
risk
reduction
supplies;
wound
care
training
and
supplies;
overdose
prevention
education
and
training;
and a
mobile
unit
traveling
to
clients
in their
own
neighborhoods
•
Peer-led
support
group
for HIV
positive
individuals,
their
family
and
friends
•
Targeted
prevention
interventions
• Care
coordination
facilitated
by the
Early
Intervention
Services
(EIS)/Case
Management
Team
•
Transportation
to and
from
medical
appointments
for HIV
positive
individuals
•
Tobacco
cessation
• Free
NARCAN
kits and
training
For
more
information
about
CHAG,
including
its
COVID-19
vaccine
access
program,
please
call
313-963-3434
or visit
www.chagdetroit.org.
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