Ryan White Title III HIV Capacity Development and Planning Grants - Project Title: “FY 2024 RWHAP Part C Capacity Development Program” Funds Requested: $150,000 Performance Period: September 1, 2024 – August 31, 2025 Family Health Centers at NYU Langone (FHC), due to its strong commitment to full integration of services for PLWH, requests FY 2024 Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part C Capacity Development Program funding to strengthen its organizational capacity to improve integration of health care services, and to enhance access to high quality HIV primary health care services for low-income, uninsured, and underserved PLWH in central and southwestern Brooklyn. The proposed project would be an expansion of our currently funded Ryan White Part C HIV Care Innovation project with the selected activity, Coordination or integration of HIV primary care with oral health and/or behavioral health care. The proposed project would directly address Stage 2 (Linkage to HIV Medical Care) and Stage 3 (Retention in Care) of the HIV Care Continuum by expanding clinical dental care for PLWH, who often have extensive treatment needs, and meaningfully strengthen the coordination and integration of HIV primary care and dental care at FHC. Proposed Services: FHC will increase the number and proportion of PLWH who receive high-quality dental services, including regular preventive care, and complete treatment plans, by 1) expanding dental capacity for PLWH at Red Hook FHC and 2) expanding network integration to address the overlap between patients established in dental who underutilize primary care and oral health services. The FHC will also implement a patient-level ‘HIV-Dental Health’ dashboard for a new HIV Innovation approach to improve coordination, integration, and facilitation of providing oral health services to PLWH. Funding Preference: FHC, requests a funding preference, under Qualification #2 “Underserved Populations”, reflecting the organization’s historical commitment to providing primary care services to a medically underserved population in central and southwestern Brooklyn, New York and due to its place as a principal HIV primary care and support services provider in the catchment area.