Background: Data-to-Care (D2C) programming is an important strategy in locating and relinking persons with HIV who are not in care (NIC), back to care. However, Health Department D2C programs have found a large proportion of individuals who seem NIC are living outside of their jurisdiction. Jurisdictions are limited in ability to cross-communicate regarding such individuals.
Setting: Two D2C programs [New York State (NYS) and Florida (FL)] funded through the Partnerships-for-Care Demonstration Project, partnered to conduct a feasibility pilot project to test cross-jurisdictional D2C reciprocity.
Methods: Jurisdictions made efforts to set up infrastructure for cross-jurisdictional D2C, and NYS worked to identify persons reported in NYS presumed in need of linkage/relinkage efforts in FL using 3 years of NYS D2C program outcomes.
Results: One hundred forty NYS NIC individuals were presumed to need linkage/relinkage efforts in FL. However, case dispositions for these individuals were not able to be advanced beyond determining HIV care status due to 4 critical challenges: (1) Local legal and regulatory permissibility for sharing identifiable HIV surveillance information outside of a specific jurisdiction varies; (2) Electronic infrastructure in place does not support public health follow-up of individuals who are not within a jurisdiction's HIV surveillance system; (3) An individual's verifiable current residence is not easily attained; and (4) Roles, responsibilities, and case prioritization within each state, and across jurisdictions vary and require clear delineation.
Conclusions: Although programmatic challenges during this D2C feasibility pilot project were unsurmountable for NYS and FL, potential solutions presented may facilitate broader national cross-jurisdictional D2C reciprocity.