BackgroundWith the acceleration of the hepatitis C (HCV) epidemic in the United States and the ongoing public health impact of undetected human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infection, there is a critical need for enhanced secondary prevention efforts where patients accessing care are not routinely screened. The purpose of this program was to implement routine opt-out HIV and HCV screenings in a high-volume urban emergency department (ED) through the use of an EMR enhancement to increase a provider’s likelihood of testing eligible patients, and to provide linkage to care for patients identified to have positive tests.MethodsFrom November 27, 2018 to March 31, 2019, EMR-based HIV and HCV screening was implemented in a quaternary care ED in Northern California. EMR best practice alerts were developed based on a combination of local and CDC guidelines and populated on registered patients receiving blood laboratories or receiving STI testing. Laboratory HIV/HCV screening utilized a unique two-specimen collection scheme to enable molecular testing without requiring patient return visits. Patients were excluded if they chose to opt out from testing or the provider deemed opt out was not possible. Upon notification of a positive test result through the EMR, a patient navigator was responsible for providing disease education and linking patients to care.ResultsThe prevalence of HCV antibody positivity was 9.6% (637/6,627) and 0.97% (55/5,628) for HIV. Of the 255 HCV-RNA positives, 110 were known and 145 newly diagnosed. Of the 90 HIV patients, 31 were known and 8 newly diagnosed. Although current CDC hepatitis C screening guidelines recommend screening all adults born during 1945–1965, we conducted universal screening of adults 18 years or older. Of those screened antibody-positive for HCV 64% fell within the 1945–1965 birth cohort.ConclusionIntroducing routine opt-out testing using an automated EMR-based screening program is an effective method to identify and screen eligible patients for HIV and HCV in episodic care safety net settings where universal screenings are not routinely implemented. The unexpectedly high rate of HIV seroprevalence suggests the ED environment continues to be an important setting to access populations not receiving routine care despite longstanding CDC recommendations for universal screening. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.