AIDS Foundation of Chicago
Get Involved Newsroom Living with HIV Jobs About AFC
Home Care Prevention Housing Advocacy Grantmaking Events Donate
 
Follow Us
Twitter Facebook YouTube Flickr
Home >> Care Home >> Case Management >> Intensive Case Management >> Perinatal Case Management

Perinatal Case Management Initiative PDF Print
Wednesday, October 20, 2010

In 2002, the AIDS Foundation of Chicago (AFC) welcomed the University of Chicago's Children's Hospital and Mount Sinai Hospital as partners in a yearlong program to reduce perinatal HIV transmission.

The goal of the prevention project, which is jointly supported by AFC and the Pediatric AIDS Chicago Prevention Initiative (PACPI), is to improve the health of pregnant HIV-positive women and to reduce the possibility that an infected mother will transmit the virus to her baby during pregnancy, labor, or delivery.

Perinatal HIV transmission accounts for 90% of pediatric AIDS cases in the U.S. In 1994, the Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group discovered that when the HIV medication zidovudine (AZT) is dispensed to HIV-positive women during their pregnancy and labor, and to their newborns, the risk of HIV transmission could be reduced by two-thirds. Since this critical medical discovery, pediatric AIDS cases due to perinatal transmission have declined 75% between 1992 and 1998. But, the effectiveness of AZT is dependent upon the individual's adherence to its complex regimen and the maintenance of regular medical visits. To this end, AFC and PACPI created two new intensive case management positions to ensure that pregnant HIV-positive women get the medical support and counseling they need to sustain their HIV-medication regimens.

Clients are identified and referred to an intensive case manager, known as a maternal child health specialist, by obstetricians and other health care and social service providers, as well as by AFC-funded case managers. The specialist provides clients with intensive case management services throughout the term of their pregnancies and six-months after delivery. These services consist of linkages to primary, prenatal, and well-child care, as well as substance abuse treatment and other psychosocial services as needed. At the end of the six-month, post-partum period, clients are transferred from intensive to non-intensive HIV case management, for further health services needs. AFC anticipates that the case manager to client ratio for the program will be between 1:8 and 1:20 at any given time during the pregnancy and post-partum period.

More Information
For more information on perinatal case management, please call PACPI at 312-334-0971 or the 24-hour Illinois Perinatal HIV Hotline at 1-800-439-4079.


 
Banner
Banner
AIDS FOUNDATION OF CHICAGO | 200 WEST JACKSON BOULEVARD, SUITE 2200. CHICAGO, IL 60606 | P. 312.922.2322PRIVACY POLICY