Stuart Gaffney
University of California, San Francisco
6 Papers
12 Citations
Stuart Gaffney is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicaid. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Practice transformations to optimize the delivery of HIV primary care in community healthcare settings in the United States: A program implementation study.
Wayne T. Steward,Kimberly A. Koester,Mary A. Guzé,Valerie B. Kirby,Shannon M. Fuller,M. Moran,Emma Wilde Botta,Stuart Gaffney,Corliss D. Heath,Steven Bromer,Starley B. Shade +10 more
TL;DR: It is found that practice transformations are a potential strategy for addressing anticipated workforce challenges among those providing care to PLWH and hold the promise of optimizing the use of personnel and ensuring the delivery of care to all in need while potentially enhancing HIV care continuum outcomes.
•Journal Article
Potential deterrent effect of name-based HIV infection surveillance.
Edwin D. Charlebois,Andre Maiorana,Marisa Mclaughlin,Kim Koester,Stuart Gaffney,George W. Rutherford,Stephen F. Morin +6 more
TL;DR: This analysis documents strong support, among HIV test takers in California, for a non-name coded HIV reporting system and indicates a high probability of a shift away from confidential testing toward anonymous testing under a scenario of name-based reporting.
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The Architecture of an Internal, Scientific, Presubmission Review Program Designed to Increase the Impact and Success of Grant Proposals and Manuscripts.
TL;DR: The rationale and practical elements of the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies at the University of California, San Francisco has refined an internal, pre-submission, peer-review program to improve the quality and potential success of products before external submission are detailed.
7
HIV surveillance in theory and practice: assessing the acceptability of California's non-name HIV surveillance regulations.
Kimberly A. Koester,Andre Maiorana,Karen Vernon,Edwin D. Charlebois,Stuart Gaffney,Tim Lane,Stephen F. Morin +6 more
TL;DR: Overall, California's non-name HIV reporting regulations were acceptable to most key stakeholders and acceptability of a non- name system was highest among advocates and healthcare providers.
2
Acceptance of the use of HIV surveillance data for care engagement: national and local community perspectives.
David A. Evans,Dana Van Gorder,Stephen F. Morin,Wayne T. Steward,Stuart Gaffney,Edwin D. Charlebois +5 more
TL;DR: Acceptance of the use of surveillance data for HIV care linkage, retention, and reengagement is achievable, particularly if stakeholders have been engaged in the design, conduct, and evaluation of programs.