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Dive into the research topics where Sonia Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by Sonia Lee.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2017

Transitioning HIV-infected adolescents to adult care at 14 clinics across the United States: using adolescent and adult providers’ insights to create multi-level solutions to address transition barriers

Morgan M. Philbin; Amanda E. Tanner; Brittany D. Chambers; Alice Ma; Samuella Ware; Sonia Lee; J. Dennis Fortenberry

ABSTRACT HIV-infected adolescents have disproportionately low rates of care retention and viral suppression. Approximately half disengage from care while transitioning to adult clinics, in part due to fragmented care systems and lack of streamlined protocols. We conducted 58 qualitative interviews with social service and health care providers across 14 Adolescent Trials Network clinics (n = 28) and 20 adult clinics that receive transitioning adolescents (n = 30) from August 2015–June 2016. We used the constant comparative approach to examine processes, barriers, and facilitators of adult care transition. Transition barriers coalesced around three levels. Structural: insurance eligibility, transportation, and HIV-related stigma; Clinical: inter-clinic communication, differences in care cultures, and resource/personnel limitations; and Individual: adolescents’ transition readiness and developmental capacity. Staff-initiated solutions (e.g., grant-funded transportation) were often unsustainable and applied individual-level solutions to structural-level barriers. Comprehensive initiatives, which develop collaborative policies and protocols that support providers’ ability to match the solution and barrier level (i.e., structural-to-structural), are sorely needed. These initiatives should also support local systematic planning to facilitate inter-clinic structures and communication. Such approaches will help HIV-infected adolescents transition to adult care and improve long-term health outcomes.


Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society | 2018

Prevalence and Associated Characteristics of HIV-Infected Children in Latin America Who Know Their HIV Status.

Sonia Lee; George K. Siberry; Jorge Alarcón; Mary Reyes Vega; Lenka Kolevic Roca; César Gutiérrez; Regina Célia de Menezes Succi; Mario F. Peixoto; Sonia K. Stoszek; Rohan Hazra; D. Robert Harris

We estimated the prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disclosure in children from a prospective observational cohort study conducted at clinical sites in Brazil, Mexico, and Peru. Fewer than half of the children in this study knew their HIV status, which highlights the need for better strategies for disclosure that are age and culturally appropriate.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2018

Healthcare Transition for Youth Living With HIV: Outcomes from a Prospective Multi-site Study

Amanda E. Tanner; Morgan M. Philbin; Brittany D. Chambers; Alice Ma; Sophia A. Hussen; Samuella Ware; Sonia Lee; J. Dennis Fortenberry

PURPOSE Youth living with HIV (YLHIV) in the United States (U.S.) account for nearly one-third of new HIV infections and face significant barriers to care engagement; only 25% are virally suppressed. Healthcare transition (HCT) from pediatric/adolescent to adult-oriented care can be particularly disruptive. Accordingly, we prospectively examined HCT processes at 14 distinct geographical sites across the U.S. METHODS We collected Audio Computer-Assisted Self-Interviews data and abstracted electronic medical records from 135 HCT-eligible YLHIV at baseline and 9-month follow-up. Descriptive analyses and multilevel modeling were conducted. Data also included qualitative interviews with 28 adolescent and 30 adult providers across 14 adolescent and 20 adult clinics, respectively. Interviews were analyzed using the constant comparative method; this analysis focused on specific HCT recommendations. RESULTS At baseline, youth were primarily age 24 (78.8%), male (76.8%), black (78.0%), identified as a sexual minority (62.9%), had attended an HIV appointment in the past 3 months (90.2%), had Medicaid for insurance (65.2%), and were always or mostly always adherent to their antiretroviral therapy (65.9%). At the 9-month follow-up only 37% of YLHIV successfully transitioned to adult care. Both individual-level (insurance status and disclosure-related stigma) and clinic-level (adolescent clinic best practices) factors were significant. Adolescent and adult clinic staff offered recommendations to support HCT; these focused primarily on clinical changes. CONCLUSIONS This study highlights the complex set of individual- and clinic-level factors associated with HCT. Addressing these key factors is essential for developing streamlined, comprehensive, and context-specific HCT protocols to support continuous care engagement for YLHIV.


Youth & Society | 2016

Sexual Partner Characteristics, Relationship Type, and HIV Risk Among a Community Venue–Based Sample of Urban Adolescent and Young Adult Men Who Have Sex With Men

Cherrie B. Boyer; Lauren Greenberg; James Korelitz; Gary W. Harper; Rachel Stewart-Campbell; Diane M. Straub; Renata Sanders; Lisa-Henry Reid; Donna Futterman; Sonia Lee; Jonathan M. Ellen; Aids Interventions

Few studies have examined sexual partnerships and HIV risk in diverse samples of African American/Black and Hispanic/Latino adolescent and young adult men who have sex with men (YMSM), a group that have a high burden of HIV in the United States. A community–venue recruitment approach was used, which identified significant differences in HIV risk by sexual partner type among 1,215 YMSM. Those with casual partners had a higher number of sexual partners, had more sexually transmitted infections (STIs), were more likely to engage in transactional sex, and to use alcohol, marijuana, or other substances compared with those with main partners only. Among those with female sexual partners, many used condoms “every time” when engaging in vaginal sex with casual partners, but a sizable proportion “never/rarely” used condoms with their main partners. Our findings demonstrate a need for tailored HIV prevention education and counseling with necessary skills regarding consistent and correct condom use with all sexual partnerships.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2017

Adolescent to Adult HIV Health Care Transition From the Perspective of Adult Providers in the United States

Amanda E. Tanner; Morgan M. Philbin; Alice Ma; Brittany D. Chambers; Sharon Nichols; Sonia Lee; J. Dennis Fortenberry


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2015

Social Support and Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Status Disclosure to Friends and Family: Implications for Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Positive Youth

Sonia Lee; Michiyo Yamazaki; D. Robert Harris; Gary W. Harper; Jonathan M. Ellen


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2016

Exposure to Violence and Virologic and Immunological Outcomes Among Youth With Perinatal HIV in the Pediatric HIV/AIDS Cohort Study

Deborah Kacanek; Kathleen Malee; Claude A. Mellins; Katherine Tassiopoulos; Renee Smith; Mitzie Grant; Sonia Lee; Danish Q. Siddiqui; Ana Puga


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2018

Transitioning Adolescents with HIV to Adult Care: Outcomes From a Prospective Multi-Site Study

Amanda E. Tanner; Morgan M. Philbin; Brittany D. Chambers; Alice Ma; Sophia A. Hussen; Sonia Lee; J. Dennis Fortenberry


Aids and Behavior | 2018

Project ACCEPT: Evaluation of a Group-Based Intervention to Improve Engagement in Care for Youth Newly Diagnosed with HIV

Sybil Hosek; Gary W. Harper; Diana Lemos; Jane K. Burke-Miller; Sonia Lee; Lawrence S. Friedman; Jaime Martinez


PMC | 2017

Transitioning HIV-infected adolescents to adult care at 14 clinics across the United States: Using adolescent and adult providers’ insights to create multi-level solutions to address transition barriers

Morgan M. Philbin; Amanda E. Tanner; Brittany D. Chambers; Alice Ma; Samuella Ware; Sonia Lee; J. Dennis Fortenberry

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Alice Ma

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Amanda E. Tanner

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Brittany D. Chambers

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Samuella Ware

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Sharon Nichols

University of California

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