Carolyn Audet, PhD, MSci
Global Health Topic(s): Global Health, Couple-based HIV care and treatment, Health Care Extenders, Health Care Delivery Models
Project Country(ies): Mozambique, South Africa, United States
Dr. Audet is an associate professor in the Department of Health Policy and the Institute for Global Health at Vanderbilt University and an Honorary Associate Professor at MRC/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit (Agincourt), in the School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, at the University of the Witwatersrand, in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Dr. Audet focuses on three main lines of research: 1) male partner engagement in HIV care and treatment of their pregnant wives/partners to increase uptake of testing and treatment while promoting empathy and support, 2) collaboration with traditional healers and traditional birth attendants to increase testing, linkage, and treatment adherence among people living with HIV, and 3) evaluation of comprehensive community-based programs designed to increase treatment uptake among those with substance use disorder.
Dr. Audet is the PI of an R34 (2021-2023) and an R01 (2017-2022) from NIMH, an R21 (2020-2022) from NIAID, and several Bureau of Justice grants in collaboration with the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services. She received her PhD from Vanderbilt University, where she studied Anthropology, a MSci in Epidemiology from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and competed a Fellowship in Implementation Science from Washington University in St Louis.
Prior Projects:
Education
Ph.D., Vanderbilt University
Featured Publications
- Adapting an Adherence Support Workers intervention: Engaging traditional healers as adherence partners for persons enrolled in HIV Care and Treatment in rural Mozambique
- An Unrecognized Key Population? Traditional treatment practices associated with HIV risk among traditional healers in rural South Africa
- Occupational hazards of traditional healers: Repeated unprotected blood exposures risk infectious disease transmission
- Symptomatic HIV-positive persons in rural Mozambique who first consult a traditional healer have delays in HIV testing: A cross-sectional study
- Engagement and participation of men in antenatal care services: Impact on HIV testing and Option B+ treatment uptake in pregnancy from a rural community participatory action program in Mozambique
Ntirhisano aims to improve acute and chronic health outcomes among rural South and Southern African people by integrating traditional healers into the primary healthcare system. The program is a partnership between MRC/Wits-Rural Public Health, Health Transitions Unit (Agincourt), and VIGH. Drs. Carolyn Audet and Ryan Wagner co-lead the initiative.
WATCH: Engaging Traditional Healers to strengthen HIV Counseling and Testing Services
Funded Projects
Project News
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Carolyn Audet expands HIV research into South Africa
February 23, 2021