Ryan White Title III HIV Capacity Development and Planning Grants - Established in 1973, Whitman-Walker Health (WWH) is a Federally Qualified Health Care Center (FQHC) and Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) in the Washington, DC metropolitan area. WWH offers primary medical and dental care; HIV/AIDS specialty care, mental health and substance use counseling and treatment; HIV education, prevention, and testing; support groups; legal services; and medical adherence case management. WWH has been a Ryan White Part C grantee since 1991 and remains committed to meeting the health needs of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender communities and people living with HIV. WWH will use capacity development funds for Infrastructure Development, specifically to continue expanding capabilities of the electronic medical record (EMR) to support telehealth as a much-needed response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic while executing the next phase of development of the health center’s integrated HIV/Primary care pathway with the addition of behavioral and oral health measures. This will better allow multidisciplinary service providers to collaboratively address the complex needs of patients living with HIV by providing comprehensive care that considers the various aspects of whole-person health and wellness. The proposed service area for this capacity building grant is the entire District of Columbia. WWH requests $150,000 for this one-year project. WWH serves 30% of people living with HIV in the District. WWH requests statutory preference, as HIV services in the DC area do not sufficiently address the need. HIV+ patients at WWH are predominantly Black. In describing gender, approximately three-quarters of WWH’s HIV+ patients are male and 7% identify as transgender or genderqueer/non-binary, with more than half reporting non-heterosexual identity. Thirty-four percent of all patients are covered by public insurance plans and 53% fall under 200% of the federal poverty level. WWH centers are well-situated, geographically, to provide services to underserved communities. Washington, DC has one of the highest rates of HIV transmission in the country and falls within the CDC’s definition of an epidemic. It is essential for community health centers to provide the highest quality and most innovative care possible as part of a coordinated response to the epidemic. As part of WWH’s efforts to reduce the impact of HIV and achieve the objectives of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy, Population Health & Quality (PHQ) staff will continue expanding and overseeing clinical teams’ use of Relevant, a population health platform, as a complement to the health center’s eClinicalWorks (eCW) EMR platform. Using the sophisticated analytics provided by Relevant will continue improving patient engagement via telehealth, streamlining care planning, and supporting implementation of targeted HIV interventions via telehealth modalities. Relevant will also continue to allow for real-time dashboards and visualizations of WWH’s patient populations, segmented in meaningful ways that allow the staff to target tele-interventions based on risk and need. With this funding request, PHQ staff will further augment use of Relevant by building on the integrated HIV/Primary care pathway with the incorporation of behavioral and oral health measures and tools to improve the overall health and wellbeing of people living with HIV while enhancing their quality of life and increasing annual retention in care. PHQ staff will also continue to facilitate training and provide technical assistance for existing and incoming multidisciplinary clinical staff to increase their use of standardized population health tools in Relevant for visit planning in the telehealth world. This capacity-building expansion of WWH’s EMR and companion analytics will support efforts toward achieving two of the three National HIV/AIDS Strategy goals: 1) Increase access to care and improve health outcomes for people living with HIV and 2) Reduce HIV-related health disparities.