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Paving the Way in a Virtual Vacuum: Successes

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Title: Paving the Way in a Virtual Vacuum: Successes


1
Paving the Way in a Virtual Vacuum Successes
Lessons Learned from the New York City
Internet-based Interventions Advisory Group
  • Kenny Neal Shults
  • Management Consultant, FITA-MHRA
  • SexTech Conference
  • January, 2008

2
Your thoughts
  • How many have fully developed policies,
    procedures, protocols or standards that guide
    your Internet-based projects?
  • How many of you collaborate or share information
    and resources with other Internet-based service
    providers? How so?

3
Agree or Disagree
  • Oral sex is medium risk sexual activity
  • Online health professionals always identify
    themselves as such when in any web-based venue
  • Staff Internet compulsivity or addiction is a
    valid concern that could impact you and/or your
    agency
  • Its ok to pretend to be just another chatter in
    order to facilitate a health discussion (bait and
    switch)
  • There should be a cap on how many hours staff
    spend online conducting Internet-based work
  • Online staff should be monitored in any way
    possible to ensure they are not crossing
    boundaries, working not surfing, etc.

4
Questions
  • Is it ever appropriate to engage a client
    without first revealing that one is a health
    professional working for a service provider?
  • What kinds of training and supervision do staff
    members need in order to work effectively in this
    environment?
  • What kinds of guidelines need to be established
    up-front so that situations that are inherently
    social and sexual remain safe and
    comfortable/appropriate for staff?
  • What kind of hours should staff be asked to work
    to ensure that clients are reached but that
    workers boundaries are also respected?
  • What kind of liability could agencies face as a
    result of unethical or inappropriate service
    delivery?
  • Setting up profiles in chat rooms should there
    be there rules or standards?

5
Internet-based encounters
  • What do you think is the most important
    distinction between Internet-based and
    face-to-face health education encounters?
  • Do you think that having different service
    providers in web-based venues, with differing
    views on the aforementioned issues, has an impact
    on the community? How?

6
IIAG
  • The IIAG is an advisory body made up of
    individuals representing CBOs, NGOs, and local
    and State health departments to meet the IIAGs
    mission to increase the quality of NYC
    Internet-based health promotion and prevention
    service provision by advising the department of
    health on relevant issues and standards of
    practice.

7
IIAG Mission
  • To enhance the quality of Internet-based health
    promotion and HIV and STD prevention services
    provided by New York City-based organizations
    through the development and dissemination of
    resources, best practices and standards, a
    commitment to ethical service delivery, and the
    recommendation of these to the New York City
    Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.

8
IIAG topics
  • Identifying Promising Internet Models
  • Internet Addiction
  • Disclosing Professional Role and AffiliationIf,
    When and How
  • Prevention Resources
  • Partnerships between Commercial Internet Sites
    and Health Providers
  • Structuring Positions and Ongoing Support and
    Supervision of Staff
  • Ethics of Encouraging HIV Status Disclosure In
    Online Venues
  • Staff Training
  • Monitoring and Evaluation of Internet
    Interventions

9
IIAG Participation
  • Many of the first participants were
    early-adopters of Internet-based strategies
  • As interest and the viability of these
    initiatives increases, so does interest in IIAG
    participation especially among those new to the
    field
  • As new agencies come into the IIAG, they benefit
    from the experience in the room. Existing members
    assist themselves and late-adopters by preventing
    late-adopters from making mistakes that may
    damage the reputation of Internet-based service
    providers.

10
What worked well
  • Invited any and all agencies conducting
    Internet-based health promotion and/or prevention
    activities
  • Co-chairs were community reps, not DOH reps
  • Structure had a informal feel simple structure
    allowed for a great deal of sharing from
    participants
  • Copious minutes were emailed to parts. that
    included any and all contributions,
    recommendations, concerns, etc., and
    participants names were used
  • Assessments and feedback showed that topic
    oriented sessions were most popular and resulted
    in greater turnout

11
Lessons learned
  • Sub-committees
  • Location of meetings
  • Co-chairs
  • Inviting community members

12
Incentive for participation
  • Assists in getting disparate agencies to the
    table to discuss important issues of ethics,
    liability prevention, etc.
  • Agencies get to weigh-in and help set standards
  • DOH gets insight (or much needed updating)
  • Agencies learn from one another
  • Misconceptions are discussed and dispelled
  • New, innovative approaches are shared and
    examined
  • Funding

13
Participating organizations
  • Organizations that have been members or
    participants in the IIAG include
  • AIDS Center of Queens County
  • Bronx AIDS Services
  • Center for HIV Educational Studies and Training
    (CHEST)
  • Connected Health Solutions
  • Cicatelli Associates Inc.
  • Gay Mens Health Crisis
  • Harlem United
  • Hispanic AIDS Forum
  • Forging Ahead for Community Empowerment and
    Support (FACES, formerly the Minority Task Force
    on AIDS)
  • New Jersey Department of Health and Senior
    Services, STD Program
  • New York City Department of Health and Mental
    Hygiene
  • New York State Department of Health, AIDS
    Institute
  • MHRA-FITA
  • People of Color in Crisis (POCC)
  • New York City Department of Health and Mental
    Hygiene, Program Evaluation Training Unit

14
Sub-committees
  • Standards and Ethics Committee
  • Areas of responsibility include
  • Cultural competence of Internet-based
    interventions-Devising tenets of Internet
    cultural competency assessing the online
    communitys cultural values, language and norms
    and identifying ways in which providers can take
    these into consideration when designing an
    intervention.
  • Staff training and standardization of outreach
    procedures-Creating curricula for training
    frontline Internet staff and specific policies
    and procedures for conducting such work.
  • Political climate-Assessing and outlining the
    impact that more conservative funding and
    political climates may have on the viability of
    these types of initiatives.
  • Cont.

15
Sub-committees
  • Standards and Ethics Committee, cont.
  • Ethics of service delivery-Assessing and
    outlining ethical considerations associated with
    engaging Internet users under various
    circumstances such as in sex-seeking situations
    or by posing as another online chatter.
  • Job descriptions for staff providing direct
    services online-Developing position descriptions
    for Internet-based staff that detail the work in
    accurate and updated detail.
  • Confidentiality standards for agencies providing
    Internet-based interventions-Developing standards
    and model systems for delivering and documenting
    services without compromising client
    confidentiality.

16
Sub-committees
  • Research Committee
  • Areas of responsibility include
  • Literature searches to ascertain the latest
    scientific findings about Internet interventions
    and related topics.
  • Identifying and conveying relevant research on
    Internet-based efforts to the larger group.
  • Prevention Resources Committee
  • Areas of responsibility include
  • Communication between providers.
  • Developing relationships with online venues such
    as AOL, Yahoo, and
  • dating sites.
  • Identifying or developing resource materials for
    members and participants to share and/or build
    upon.
  • Development of tools for Internet service
    delivery such as documentation and data
    collection instruments.

17
Sub-committees
  • Evaluation Committee
  • Areas of responsibility include
  • Devising possible (collaborative) referral
    tracking system ideas for the group and funders
    to consider for use in measuring the
    effectiveness of Internet-based interventions.
  • Discussing and developing outcomes monitoring
    systems for use with Internet-based initiatives.
  • Promising Internet Models
  • Documentation of models of promising
    Internet-based health promotion or prevention
    strategies.

18
IIAG Report
  • The history and formation of the advisory group
  • Methods for replicating a similar effort
  • Several critical issues and considerations
    explored by the IIAG with excerpts from minutes
  • Can be accessed at http//www.nycsag.org/tech_conf
    erence.html
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