SESSION TITLE: Primary Care Provider’s role in PrEP Provision to LGBTQ Patients in Virginia
DATE: July 13, 2022
TIME: 12:00 PM (EST) (45 minutes)
SESSION INFORMATION/DESCRIPTION: The purpose of this webinar is to discuss the importance of the primary care provider (physicians, APRN’s, and PA’s) role in prescribing PrEP to LGBTQ patients.
SESSION OBJECTIVES: At the conclusion of the webinar, attendees will be able to:
· Describe what PrEP is
· Identify Virginia populations at risk for HIV acquisition
· Describe evidence of the need for PrEP in Virginia
· Identify barriers to PrEP acquisition for LGBTQ patients
· Identify the role of primary care providers in screening for HIV risk and PrEP provision
· Describe components of HIV screening and PrEP education
· Identify and implement facilitators to offering PrEP LGBTQ patients
· Identify HIV screening and PrEP resources for primary care providers
SPEAKER BIO:
NAME AND TITLE; Daryl Traylor
Daryl Traylor is an Army veteran, university instructor, and public health professional turned medical student and HIV/PrEP researcher. A native of Houston, Texas, Daryl earned his PhD in Nursing from the University of Missouri-Columbia in June 2021.
While a student at Mizzou, Daryl studied the PrEP prescribing practices of Southern primary care providers who serve African American communities. Other research projects that he collaborated on while in his PhD program included studying stress, coping, and resilience in communities of color during the COVID-19 pandemic and examining barriers and facilitators to PrEP uptake in African American communities in Southern Nevada.
He is a summa cum laude graduate with a B.S. in Health Promotion from Northern Arizona University. He also earned a second bachelor’s in Microbiology from Arizona State University and master’s degrees in Pharmacology and Public Health from Michigan State University. Daryl is currently a first-year osteopathic medical student at the University of the Incarnate Word School of Osteopathic Medicine in San Antonio, Texas. He hopes to pursue a career in family medicine or emergency medicine with a focus on providing HIV care to marginalized communities in the Southwestern United States.
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