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Date: Friday, Feb. 14, 1997
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: HRSA Press Office(301)443-3376

HHS Announces $1 Million in Awards to Support HIV Care for Native Americans


Health and Human Services Secretary Donna E. Shalala today announced Ryan White CARE Act awards totaling $1 million to three organizations to develop and evaluate health care models that provide the range of health care and social services needed by Native Americans living with HIV/AIDS and their families.

Awardees include Alaska Native HIV/AIDS Case Management Project, Anchorage, Alaska; Native Care: HIV/AIDS Integrated Services Network, Oakland, Calif.; and Red Ribbon Bridge Project, Santa Barbara, Calif. "These projects offer models of HIV/AIDS care that break down the barriers Native Americans face in accessing needed services--medical, mental health, substance abuse, housing, legal assistance and other support services--that respect their culture, spiritual needs and traditions," said Secretary Shalala.

The projects were funded under the Special Projects of National Significance (SPNS) Program, which is part of the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency (CARE) Act administered by the Health Resources and Services Administration. Its purpose is to demonstrate and evaluate for national replication innovative HIV/AIDS service delivery models for hard-to-reach individuals. It is not intended for long-term services delivery.

Through the SPNS Program, HRSA also funds an Evaluation Technical Assistance Center for grantees at the Columbia University School of Public Health in New York City.

"The SPNS Program tests innovative models of care to give communities and states better solutions for meeting the unique health care needs of hard-to-reach individuals and families, including Native Americans," said HRSA Administrator Ciro V. Sumaya, M.D., M.P.H.T.M. "This is an investment with a future once successful models are replicated around the country and individuals with HIV/AIDS have better access to a full range of coordinated services."

In addition to these three projects, the Navajo Nation Division of Health in Window Rock, Ariz., received a 5-year SPNS grant on September 30, 1996, to develop a tribal-focused model of HIV care. First year funding is $200,000.

From fiscal year 1991, when CARE Act grants were first awarded, through fiscal year 1997, more than $3.8 billion in federal funds have been appropriated to assist people living with HIV/AIDS in every state, 49 major metropolitan areas and U.S. territories.


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