ճin the School of Medicine has releasedtitled, “Revitalizing Community Engagement in the Public Health Use of Molecular HIV Epidemiology.”

The paper is a product of the Ethics of HIV MolecularSurveillance Project, funded through an administrative supplement to the NIAID-funded R01 Phylodynamics Response, Monitoring, & Prevention of Transmission (HIV PROMPT; PI Ann Dennis, R01Al135970).
The research team engaged with diverse stakeholders in North Carolina, including community members living with HIV, health care providers, public health leaders and professionals, community advocates, and bioethicists, through a multi-phase engagement process.
The white paper was prepared by the PROMPT Bioethics Study Team, which includes Dennis,Suzanne Day, PhD, MA;; and.