Monday, September 9, 2019 Time Session 13:00 – 13:30 Welcome Remarks High-Level Summit on Addressing Health Inequalities to End the HIV Epidemic by 2030

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Monday, September 9, 2019 Time Session 13:00 – 13:30 Welcome Remarks High-Level Summit on Addressing Health Inequalities to End the HIV Epidemic by 2030 Monday, September 9, 2019 Time Session 13:00 – 13:30 Welcome Remarks High-Level Summit on Addressing Health Inequalities to End the HIV Epidemic by 2030 13:30 – 15:30 Moderator: TBD Panelists: TBD 15:30 – 16:00 Break Panel 1 – Lessons Learned along the Continuum from 90-90-90 to Getting to Zero Moderator: Shannon Hader* (Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, Geneva, Switzerland) Panelists: ▪ Achieving 95-98-97 in London: Lessons Learned but Miles to Go o Jane Anderson* (Homerton University Hospital, London, England, UK) 16:00 – 17:30 ▪ 100% of Diagnosed PLHIV on Antiretroviral Therapy: Nairobi County’s Experience o Carol Ngunu* (Nairobi County, Kenya) ▪ HIV Status Neutrality: New York City’s Experiment for Closing 90-90-90 Gaps o Oni Blackstock* (New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, New York, NY, USA) ▪ 90-90-90 Trends and Modeling Implications for Getting to Zero in City and Municipal HIV Responses o Sindhu Ravishankar* (International Association of Providers of AIDS Care, USA) 17:30 – 19:00 Welcome Reception Tuesday, September 10, 2019 Time Session Panel 2 – Sharper Focus: Estimating, Monitoring, and Evaluating Progress towards Urban 90-90-90 Targets Moderator: Teymur Noori* (European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, Solna, Sweden) Panelists: ▪ City 90-90-90 Calculations: Kyiv o Olena Lukashevych* (Kyiv Public Health Center, Kyiv, Ukraine) 09:00 – 10:15 ▪ City 90-90-90 Calculations: San Francisco o Nikole Trainor* (San Francisco Department of Health, San Francisco, CA, USA) ▪ National and Subnational 90-90-90 Calculations: UK Cities o Valerie Delpech* (Public Health England, London, England, UK) ▪ National and Subnational 90-90-90 Calculations: Brazilian Cities o Ana Roberta Pascom* (Ministry of Health of Brazil, Brasília, Brazil) Panel 3 – Innovations in HIV Testing and Linkage to and Engagement in Care Moderator: Nitika Pai* (McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada) Panelists: ▪ Estimating HIV Coverage in Paris to Shape an Adequate HIV Testing Policy o Eve Plenel* (Towards an AIDS-Free Paris, Paris, France) 10:15 – 11:30 ▪ Introducing and Scaling-Up HIV Self-Testing in Kigali o Patricie Mukangarambe* (City of Kigali, Kigali, Rwanda) ▪ Community-Based HIV Testing: The Athens Checkpoint Experience o Sofoklis Chanos* (Positive Voice, Athens, Greece) ▪ Key Population-Led Health Services to Optimize HIV Testing and Linkage to Care o Adele Benzaken* (AIDS Healthcare Foundation, São Paulo, Brazil) 11:30 – Break 11:45 Plenary 1 – Governance for Plenary 2 – Social Accountability Plenary 3 – Municipal Finance Plenary 4 – Institutional Health Development Moderator: Nikos Dedes (Positive Moderator: Toby Eccles (Social Moderator: Ian Green* (Terrence Voice, Athens, Greece) Finance, London, England, UK) Moderator: Tom von Benthem* Higgins Trust, London, England, (Public Health Service, UK) Speaker: Speaker: Amsterdam, Netherlands) Speaker: ▪ Nancy Mahon (MAC AIDS ▪ Mohamed Osman* (Elton Speaker: Fund, New York, NY, USA) John AIDS Foundation, ▪ Ricardo Baptista Leite* London, England, UK) ▪ Robert Ndugwa* (United (UNITE, Lisbon, Portugal) Nations Human Settlement 11:45 – Topics: Programme, Nairobi, Kenya) 13:00 Topics: Topics: ▪ Roles and Responsibilities of Philanthropy to Promote and ▪ Shouldering the Burden: Topics: ▪ Cooperation and Support Social Accountability Public-Private Financing for Coordination in the Health in Health Municipal HIV and Other ▪ Strengthening Systems Response between Municipal ▪ Government, Business, and Health Responses Leadership to Accelerate and National Governments Civil Society: Can Urban HIV ▪ Using Financial Leveraging City AIDS Responses ▪ Governance for Results: and Other Social Priorities be to Drive Innovation in towards Getting to Zero Demanding Cross Sector Aligned? Support of Achieving ▪ Promoting Good Accountability for the Urban Optimal Urban HIV Governance: In-Sector and Health Response Outcomes Non-Sector Institutional Development 13:00 – Break 13:15 13:15 – Lunch Symposium: Together We Can: Addressing Gender Disparities in HIV and Empowering Women 14:45 (Sponsored by Gilead) Panel 4 – Optimizing HIV Treatment – Demand, Initiation, Technologies, and Delivery Moderator: Peter Reiss* (University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands) Panelists: 14:45 – ▪ Same-Day ART Initiation: Lessons Learned in and Outcomes from New Orleans 16:00 o Jason Halperin* (Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, USA) ▪ What Long-Acting Antiretrovirals Portend for HIV Treatment in Relation to the 3rd 90 o Chloe Orkin* (Barts Health NHS Trust, London, England, UK) ▪ Differentiated Care to Expand Access to HIV and Supportive Services in Maputo City o Alice Pedro Magaia de Abreau* (Board of Health and Social Action, Maputo City, Mozambique) ▪ Community-Led HIV Treatment: Generating and Fulfilling Demand to Increase ART Coverage o Solange Baptiste* (International Treatment Preparedness Coalition, Johannesburg, South Africa) Panel 5 – Looking Beyond 90-90- Panel 6 – Syndemic Conditions Panel 7 – PrEP as an Adjunct to Panel 8 – Aligning Fast-Track 90 to Support, Measure, and Associated with HIV and ART on the Road to U=U and Cities to Reach the TB 90-90-90 Model City-Level Impact Intersectional Stigma Getting to Zero Targets Moderator: Tim Martineau* Moderator: Lucy Wanjiku Moderator: Praphan Moderator: Nick Herbert* (Joint United Nations Programme Njenga* (Positive Young Women Phanuphak* (Chulalongkorn (Member of Parliament, London, on HIV/AIDS, Geneva, Voices, Nairobi, Kenya) University, Bangkok, Thailand) England, UK) Switzerland) Panelists: Panelists: Panelists: Panelists: ▪ Examining the Intersecting ▪ Synergies between PrEP ▪ Zero TB Cities and 90-90-90 ▪ Differentiated Care to Risks of Substance Use and U=U o Lucica Ditiu* (Stop Simplify HIV Services and Disorders and HIV o Sheena TB Partnership, Reduce Unnecessary Loss-to- o Brun González McCormack* Geneva, Follow-Up Aguilar* (Espolea, (University College Switzerland) o Mpande Mukumbwa- Mexico City, Mexico) London, England, Mwenechanya* UK) ▪ Kenyan Legislature (CIDRZ, Lusaka, ▪ Mental Health as Facilitator Engagement in Nairobi 16:00 – Zambia) and Barrier to Optimizing HIV ▪ When the PrEP Effect County to End TB 17:15 Outcomes Prevails on the TasP Effect o Evelyn Kibuchi* ▪ Ending the HIV Epidemic in o Robert Remien* o Jade Ghosn* (Bichat (Kenya AIDS NGO the United States: A Case (Columbia University, University Hospital, Consortium, Nairobi, Study Across 6 US Cities New York, NY, USA) Paris, France) Kenya) o Bohdan Nosyk* (University of British ▪ Neglected Health and ▪ From Clinical Trials to ▪ Managing MDR/XDR TB in Columbia, Vancouver, Economic Impact of Sexually Clinical Impact: Scaling up Peri-Urban Communities British Columbia, Transmitted Infections in the PrEP in a Boston o Arike Alenova Canada) TasP/PrEP Era Community Health Center (National o David Harvey* o Kenneth H. Mayer* Tuberculosis Center, ▪ Community-Based (National Coalition of (Fenway Institute, Almaty, Kazakhstan) Participatory Research for STD Directors, Boston, MA, USA) Quality Assurance Washington, DC, USA) ▪ TB and HIV Co-Stigma: o Daniela Rojas Castro* ▪ How Do We Message Pathways and Interventions (Coalition PLUS, Paris, ▪ Intimate Partner Violence and Condom Use in the Age of o Gill Craig (City France) Relationship Power as PrEP? University of Psychosocial Challenges to o Terri Ford* (AIDS London, London, Reducing HIV Risk Healthcare England, UK) o Gloria Maimela* Foundation, Los (University of the Angeles, CA, USA) Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa) 17:15 – Oral Abstracts Session 1 Oral Abstracts Session 2 Oral Abstracts Session 3 Oral Abstracts Session 4 18:15 17:15 – Oral Poster Session 18:15 Wednesday, September 11, 2019 Time Session Panel 9 – Accelerating Combination HIV Prevention in Urban AIDS Responses Moderator: Mark Nelson* (Imperial College, London, England, UK) Panelists: ▪ Actioning Global HIV Prevention Targets in Urban Settings o Jorge Garrido* (Apoyo Positivo, Madrid, Spain) 09:00 – 10:15 ▪ Hot-Spot Mapping to Optimize HIV Prevention in South African Municipalities o Yogan Pillay* (Department of Health, Pretoria, South Africa) ▪ PrEParing Women to Prevent HIV Acquisition: An Integrated Theoretical Framework for PrEP Provision o K. Rivet Amico* (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA) ▪ Promoting Sexual Health to Increase HIV Prevention Services Utilization o H. Rodrigo Moheno* (Fundación Mexico Vivo, Mexico City, Mexico) Plenary 5 – Civil Society Plenary 6 – Data for Action Plenary 7 – Health Equity Plenary 8 – “Right to the City” Engagement Moderator: Jonathan Mermin* Moderator: Anne Aslett* (Elton Moderator: Anton Pozniak Moderator: Laurel Sprague (Joint (Centers for Disease Control and John AIDS Foundation, London, (Chelsea and Westminster United Nations Programme on Prevention, Atlanta, GA) England, UK) Hospital, London, England, UK) HIV/AIDS, Geneva, Switzerland) Speaker: Speaker: Speaker: Speaker: ▪ Jeff Eaton* (Imperial College, ▪ Tolullah Oni (University of ▪ Marion Wadibia* (NAZ, ▪ Rico Gustav* (GNP+, London, England, UK) Cape Town, South Africa) London, England, UK) Amsterdam, Netherlands) 10:15 – Topics: Topics: Topics: 11:30 Topics: ▪ Programmatic Targets and ▪ Applying a “Health Lens” to ▪ Leveraging Policies to ▪ 21st Century Models of Civil Health Impact Assessments to Urban Planning, Encourage Social Cohesion, (and Digital) Society Influence Urban Health Governance, and Finance to Support the Right to Health, Engagement in the Health Policies and Response Promote Health Equity and Leave No One Behind
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