CAPS CE Core Town Hall presents: Kelly Taylor, PhD, MPH & Kenneth Hall -- The YAFF Case Management Model: Its Role in Helping to End the HIV Epidemic

Lecture/Seminar
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This Town Hall is presented by the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies Community Engagement Core, with support from the CAPS Developmental and IS/HS Cores.

Register HERE!

Dr. Kelly Taylor

Dr. Taylor is an Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of Prevention Science and Director of the Center for Pandemic Preparedness and Response in the Institute for Global Health Sciences at the University of California San Francisco. Her work aims to build transformative public health solutions with community partners that advance equity by centering the perspective of those individuals and communities who are experiencing risks for poor health outcomes and empowering both them and their care teams to optimally mitigate that risk. Her current other work uses a team science approach to decrease bias in health care experienced by Black, Indigenous and People of Color using patient-provider virtual reality simulations. This work is being explored in other contexts such as maternal health and HIV stigma. Dr. Taylor has a long history of HIV prevention and biobehavioral surveillance research in Africa and the United States.

Kenneth Hall

Kenneth Hall

More info on this session coming soon!

Add to Calendar 2024-05-14 11:00:00 2024-05-14 12:00:00 CAPS CE Core Town Hall presents: Kelly Taylor, PhD, MPH & Kenneth Hall -- The YAFF Case Management Model: Its Role in Helping to End the HIV Epidemic This Town Hall is presented by the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies Community Engagement Core, with support from the CAPS Developmental and IS/HS Cores. Register HERE! Dr. Taylor is an Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of Prevention Science and Director of the Center for Pandemic Preparedness and Response in the Institute for Global Health Sciences at the University of California San Francisco. Her work aims to build transformative public health solutions with community partners that advance equity by centering the perspective of those individuals and communities who are experiencing risks for poor health outcomes and empowering both them and their care teams to optimally mitigate that risk. Her current other work uses a team science approach to decrease bias in health care experienced by Black, Indigenous and People of Color using patient-provider virtual reality simulations. This work is being explored in other contexts such as maternal health and HIV stigma. Dr. Taylor has a long history of HIV prevention and biobehavioral surveillance research in Africa and the United States. Kenneth Hall More info on this session coming soon! [email protected] Division of Prevention Science America/Los_Angeles public