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Medical & Support Services For AdolescentsHealth and Education Alternatives For Teens (HEAT) ProgramThe Health and Education Alternatives for Teens (HEAT) Program is a unique program that focuses on the special needs of young people ages 13 to 24 who are HIV positive or at risk. All services are free, confidential and comprehensive. Set in a youth-friendly atmosphere, the HEAT Program operates a "one-stop shopping" full service clinic and removes the barriers which youth often face while accessing health care services. HEAT provides comprehensive services for youth including HIV counseling and testing, STD screening and treatment, GYN care, case management services, mental health services, treatment for HIV+ youth 13-24, support groups, and health education. HEAT also serves a leadership role in strengthening the network of youth-oriented providers in the metropolitan area and heightening public awareness about the impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on adolescents. The HEAT Program was founded in 1991, making it the first of its kind in Brooklyn. We are committed to providing age-appropriate and culturally competent care for all youth--straight, gay, bisexual, transgendered, and from all ethnic backgrounds. For further information, please contact: Jeffrey Birnbaum, MD, MPH Email: jeffrey.birnbaum@downstate.edu Family, Adolescent and Children's Experience at SUNYThe Family, Adolescent and Children's Experience at SUNY is a newly-developed center working to integrate HIV care and prevention for these linked groups. It is funded through care and research grants from the Health Resources and Service Administration (HRSA), the NYSDOH AIDS Institute and the National Institutes of Health. It provides a venue to coordinate appointments for medical care, research visits, case management, nutrition, adherence and psychiatric services for family members both infected and affected by HIV. It is a lead agency in the Ryan White Part D (formerly Title IV) grant awarded to the Research Foundation of SUNY to lead a network of providers of services for HIV-infected families, women, children and youth in Brooklyn. For further information, please contact: Derrick Weekes, Project Administrator, FACES Program
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