PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New study will provide HIV prevention and treatment for incarcerated people with opioid use disorder

UMass Amherst and Tufts Medical Center receive $4.74 million grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to design, implement and assess the intervention

2024-08-09
(Press-News.org)

The University of Massachusetts Amherst and Tufts Medical Center are conducting a study to provide HIV prevention, diagnosis and treatment for people with opioid use disorders who are incarcerated in the Boston area. 

The study is funded with a $4.74 million CONNECT grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Elizabeth Evans, professor of community health education in the UMass Amherst School of Public Health and Health Sciences, and Dr. Alysse Wurcel, a physician and infectious disease consultant for the Massachusetts Sheriffs Association, will collaborate to lead the research. 

“Many people with opioid use disorder pass through carceral and legal systems,” Evans notes. “Improved access to high-quality, evidence-based treatment for HIV and other infectious diseases in justice settings is critical to addressing the overdose crisis.”

Dr. Wurcel adds, “We’re trying to increase the number of incarcerated people who are tested and treated. Overall people who are incarcerated are more likely to test positive for HIV than people who are not incarcerated. By the CDC guidelines, anyone in jail is at risk.”  

Those who test positive should be given treatment and those who test negative should be offered pre-exposure HIV medications to prevent the disease. Treatment and prevention while incarcerated involves taking medication every day, Wurcel says. 

“Dr. Wurcel and I are fortunate to lead this study in collaboration with the Massachusetts Department of Public Health and the Suffolk County jail system, where there is unprecedented cross-sector motivation to learn how to improve HIV care for incarcerated people and integrate HIV care into the jails’ existing programs,” Evans says.

  Initial study activities are focused on developing an intervention program called ID-TOUCH. Linnea Evans and Kaitlyn Jaffe, assistant professors of health promotion and policy at UMass Amherst, are co-leading efforts to examine the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention by incarcerated people, staff at the Suffolk jails and other community-based partners. 

“HIV testing and medications that prevent HIV (pre-exposure prophylaxis, known as PrEP) are evidence-based and cost-effective, yet are not adequately reaching justice-involved people,” Linnea Evans says. “Many are members of minoritized racial/ethnic groups and live in communities disproportionately impacted by HIV and the opioid epidemic. Addressing the health disparities that these service-need gaps exacerbate for socially and economically marginalized groups is a key impetus for our study.”

The study will serve as the foundation for future research that may create a model HIV treatment and prevention program for other jurisdictions around the commonwealth and the country.

“Our research will help us better understand how to create equitable access to infectious disease healthcare and treatment for people living in jail settings and returning to the community,” Jaffe says. “Along the way, we are involving people with lived and living experience of incarceration and opioid use to ensure that the intervention is matched to the needs of this population.”

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Russian invasion of Ukraine could have lasting impacts on global economy, environment

2024-08-09
As the Russian invasion of Ukraine stretches into its third year, international trade has felt the effects as sanctions on Russian exports have expanded. Now researchers have found that the invasion may not only have significant short-term impacts on the global timber markets but may leave lasting effects on the global economy and the environment. These findings are detailed in a new study which projects the impact of sanctions on Russia and military disruption in Ukraine on the global wood product markets. Researchers compared two projected scenario outcomes based on the Global Forest Products Market model, one ...

Investigating a critical factor for promoting drug-context associations and relapse

Investigating a critical factor for promoting drug-context associations and relapse
2024-08-09
Most people wouldn’t think twice after seeing sugar spilled on a counter. But for someone with a history of cocaine use, this visual cue could trigger powerful associations with their past drug use and a compulsive urge to seek the drug. Certain circuits within the brain help to form natural associations between one’s experiences and the context in which those experiences occur. These associations play a critical role in the orchestration of adaptive learning. When addictive substances are introduced, this coupling mechanism can be hijacked so that ...

New material for optically-controlled magnetic memory discovered

New material for optically-controlled magnetic memory discovered
2024-08-09
Researchers at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (PME) have made unexpected progress toward developing a new optical memory that can quickly and energy-efficiently store and access computational data. While studying a complex material composed of manganese, bismuth and tellurium (MnBi2Te4), the researchers realized that the material’s magnetic properties changed quickly and easily in response to light. This means that a laser could be used to encode information ...

Detroit research team to investigate fear of falling in MS patients

Detroit research team to investigate fear of falling in MS patients
2024-08-09
DETROIT — Taylor Takla, a Ph.D. candidate in the translational neuroscience program in Wayne State University’s School of Medicine, recently received a two-year, $96,812 F31 grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development of the National Institutes of Health to study fear of falling in those with multiple sclerosis (MS). The grant, “Investigating Fear of Falling in Multiple Sclerosis: An Interplay of Neural, Motor, Cognitive, and Psychological Factors,” aims to address a major public health concern in persons with MS that results in increased falls, decreased physical activity and ...

A new mechanism for shaping animal tissues

A new mechanism for shaping animal tissues
2024-08-09
A key question that remains in biology and biophysics is how three-dimensional tissue shapes emerge during animal development. Research teams from the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (MPI-CBG) in Dresden, Germany, the Excellence Cluster Physics of Life (PoL) at the TU Dresden, and the Center for Systems Biology Dresden (CSBD) have now found a mechanism by which tissues can be “programmed” to transition from a flat state to a three-dimensional shape. To accomplish this, the researchers looked at the development of the fruit fly Drosophila and its ...

New ancient marine crocodile from time of dinosaurs provides insight into the groups lifestyle and diversity

New ancient marine crocodile from time of dinosaurs provides insight into the groups lifestyle and diversity
2024-08-09
New ancient marine crocodile from time of dinosaurs provides insight into the groups lifestyle and diversity A newly discovered species of marine crocodile from 135 million years ago described from Germany An international team of scientists, including researchers from Germany and the UK, have described a new species of ancient marine crocodile, Enalioetes schroederi. Enalioetes lived in the shallow seas that covered much of Germany during the Cretaceous Period, approximately 135 million years ago. This ...

CMU researchers outline promises, challenges of understanding AI for biological discovery

2024-08-09
Machine learning is a powerful tool in computational biology, enabling the analysis of a wide range of biomedical data such as genomic sequences and biological imaging. But when researchers use machine learning in computational biology, understanding model behavior remains crucial for uncovering the underlying biological mechanisms in health and disease. In a recent article in Nature Methods, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science propose guidelines that outline pitfalls and opportunities for using interpretable ...

Japan SciCom Forum 2024 comes to Fukuoka on October 22-23

Japan SciCom Forum 2024 comes to Fukuoka on October 22-23
2024-08-09
On October 22 and 23, the sixth Japan SciCom Forum Conference (JSF 2024) will be held at Kyushu University's Ito Campus. Fukuoka will become the third city, following Tokyo and Okinawa, to welcome specialists in science communication from Japan and around the world. JSF 2024 will bring together a diverse group of science communicators, writers, researchers, and journalists, along with experts from overseas. The conference is open to anyone involved in sharing research findings internationally, as well as those interested in science communication, public outreach, and engagement. This year's JSF will explore a wide range of topics, including ...

Organic farms certified by peers display higher product diversity

2024-08-09
 In Brazil, a study compared two systems of organic product certification implemented in São Paulo state. One system involves conventional certification by auditors accredited by the Ministry of Agriculture and the National Institute of Metrology, Quality and Technology (INMETRO). The other is peer-to-peer certification. The study, reported in an article published in the journal Organic Agriculture, suggests that peer-to-peer certification adds the virtue of agrobiodiversity to organic farming in light of the significantly larger number of products offered by farms with this type of certification. “This ...

Republicans who believe Trump won in 2020 expect significant chaos in November

Republicans who believe Trump won in 2020 expect significant chaos in November
2024-08-09
Republicans who believe Donald Trump won the 2020 election are anticipating a much more chaotic election cycle this year than other GOP, Democratic, and independent voters, according to new polling data from the SNF Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins University. Among Republican respondents who believe President Joe Biden did not lawfully win the 2020 election, about 31% think that either “a lot” or “a great deal” of political violence will occur after the 2024 election—compared to 24% of Democratic voters, 21% of independents and just 12% of GOP voters who acknowledge Biden’s victory four years ago, the poll found.  In ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Hybrid job training improves participation for women in Nepal, study finds

Understanding aging requires more than counting birthdays

AI tool helps find life-saving medicine for rare disease

A new tool could exponentially expand our understanding of bacteria

Apply for the Davie Postdoctoral Fellowship in Artificial Intelligence for Astronomy

New study finds students' attitudes towards computer science impacts final grades

Clot-buster meds & mechanical retrieval equally reduce disability from some strokes

ISHLT relaunches Global IMACS Registry to advance MCS therapy and patient outcomes

Childhood trauma may increase the risk of endometriosis

Black, Hispanic kids less likely to get migraine diagnosis in ER

Global social media engagement trends revealed for election year of 2024

Zoom fatigue is linked to dissatisfaction with one’s facial appearance

Students around the world find ChatGPT useful, but also express concerns

Labor market immigrants moving to Germany are less likely to make their first choice of residence in regions where xenophobic attitudes, measured by right-wing party support and xenophobic violence, a

Lots of screentime in toddlers is linked with worse language skills, but educational content and screen use accompanied by adults might help, per study across 19 Latin American countries

The early roots of carnival? Research reveals evidence of seasonal celebrations in pre-colonial Brazil

Meteorite discovery challenges long-held theories on Earth’s missing elements

Clean air policies having unintended impact driving up wetland methane emissions by up to 34 million tonnes

Scientists simulate asteroid collision effects on climate and plants

The Wistar Institute scientists discover new weapon to fight treatment-resistant melanoma

Fool yourself: People unknowingly cheat on tasks to feel smarter, healthier

Rapid increase in early-onset type 2 diabetes in China highlights urgent public health challenges

Researchers discover the brain cells that tell you to stop eating

Salt substitution and recurrent stroke and death

Firearm type and number of people killed in publicly targeted fatal mass shooting events

Recent drug overdose mortality decline compared with pre–COVID-19 trend

University of Cincinnati experts present research at International Stroke Conference 2025

Physicists measure a key aspect of superconductivity in “magic-angle” graphene

Study in India shows kids use different math skills at work vs. school

Quantum algorithm distributed across multiple processors for the first time – paving the way to quantum supercomputers

[Press-News.org] New study will provide HIV prevention and treatment for incarcerated people with opioid use disorder
UMass Amherst and Tufts Medical Center receive $4.74 million grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to design, implement and assess the intervention