Providers Have the Power to End HIV in Indian Country
We can end HIV in Indian Country, and providers have an important role to play. Through preventing new infections, identifying and treating illness early, and taking a syndemic approach, a new era in Indian health is within reach. To obtain free continuing education (CE) to support your efforts, simply:
Text HIV to 94449
We’ll send you 1 message per week for 5 weeks. Each message will include a 10-15-minute video presentation on HIV and PrEP. After completing the series, you will receive CE credit.
Watch the online video series
If you prefer, you can simply watch the 5-video series below. Once you have completed the series, click on the “CE button” and complete a brief form to claim your CE.
Email us at ECHO@npaihb.org with questions or to obtain free technical assistance or HIV-related training for your clinic.
This project was funded by the Minority HIV/AIDS Fund via the Indian Health Service.
Videos
PrEP 101
In this 11-minute video, Dr. Jorge Mera, Director of Infectious Disease for Cherokee Nation Health Services, shares vital information on medications to prevent HIV infection and guidance on determining who may benefit.
PrEP Patient Initiation and Monitoring
In this 10-minute video, Dr. Mera shares useful tips for engaging patients, taking a sexual history, doing an initial PrEP workup, and monitoring patients on PrEP.
HIV Screening and Diagnosis
In this 13-minute video, Dr. Jonathan Iralu, Chief Clinical Consultant for Infectious Diseases at IHS and seasoned physician at Gallup Indian Medical Center, offers top notch advice on screening patients for HIV, having critical conversations, and establishing swift care for those that test positive.
HIV Treatment Basics
In this 14-and-a-half-minute video, Dr. Iralu shares valuable tips for treating HIV in primary care, including the basics of physical examination and labs, as well as fundamentals of antiretroviral treatment.
Substance Use Disorders, HCV, Sexually Transmitted Infections and HIV
In this 15-minute video, Dr. Mera shares
details about syndemics and the relationship between HIV, substance use, sexually transmitted infections, and hepatitis C.
Presenter Bios
Jorge Mera
MD, FACP
Dr. Jorge Mera is the Director of Infectious Diseases for Cherokee Nation Health Services, the largest tribally operated health care system in the United States. He completed his fellowship in Infectious Diseases and Clinical Microbiology at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas and is Board Certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine in Infectious Diseases. During recent years Jorge’s efforts have been dedicated to organizing the Cherokee Nation HCV elimination program, as well as the HIV/HCV ECHO project. He is also the Director of the HIV clinic since 2012 and the Principal Investigator of the End the HIV Epidemic for the CNHS. He is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine of the Oklahoma State University Health Science Center and a Fellow of the American College of Physicians.
Jonathan Iralu
MD, FACP, FIDSA
Dr. Iralu, is the Indian Health Service Chief Clinical Consultant for Infectious Diseases. He has a special interest in HIV, tuberculosis, and sexually transmitted disease care in rural communities. His research has focused on undifferentiated febrile illness in the American Southwest and on rural HIV care delivery. He has worked at Gallup Indian Medical Center since 1994 and is an instructor at Harvard Medical School and Senior Physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital Division of Global Health Equity in Boston, Massachusetts.