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AIDS Care
Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV
Volume 23, 2011 - Issue 7
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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Population-level effects of uninterrupted health insurance on services use among HIV-positive unstably housed adults

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Pages 822-830 | Received 09 Dec 2009, Accepted 04 Nov 2010, Published online: 10 Mar 2011
 

Abstract

Health services research consistently confirms the benefit of insurance coverage on the use of health services sought in the USA. However, few studies have simultaneously addressed the multitude of competing and unmet needs specifically among unstably housed persons. Moreover, few have accounted for the fact that hospitalization may lead to obtaining insurance coverage, rather than the other way around. This study used marginal structural models to determine the longitudinal impact of insurance coverage on the use of health services and antiretroviral therapy (ART) among HIV-positive unstably housed adults. The impact of insurance status on the use of health services and ART was adjusted for a broad range of confounders specific to this population. Among 330 HIV-positive study participants, both intermittent and continuous insurance coverage during the prior 3–12 months had strong and positive effects on the use of ambulatory care and ART, with stronger associations for continuous insurance coverage. Longer durations of continuous coverage were less robust in affecting emergency and inpatient care. Race and ethnicity had no significant influence on health services use in this low-income population when confounding due to competing needs was considered in adjusted analyses. Given that ambulatory care and ART are factors with substantial potential impact on the course of HIV disease, these data suggest that securing uninterrupted insurance coverage would result in large reductions in morbidity and mortality. Health care policy efforts aimed at increasing consistent insurance coverage in vulnerable populations are warranted.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to give our thanks for input regarding study design and interpretation to David Bangsberg, Thomas Buchmueller, Janet Currie, Jonathan Gruber, James G. Kahn, Richard Kronick, Arthur Meltzer, and Susan Radke; for having the courage to share their stories, we thank the study participants who made this research possible; for study support and all aspects of data collection and analysis, we thank Shemena Campbell, Richard Clark, John Day, Nelia Dela Cruz, Minoo Gorji, David Guzman, Scot Hammond, Jackie Haslam, Zizi Hawthorne, Jay Jankowski, Mac McMaster, Sandra Monk, Rebecca Packard, Joyce Powell, Kathleen Ragland, Mathew Reynolds, Jacqueline Ro, Paul Rueckhaus, Deb Schneider, Jacqueline So, John Weeks, and Kelly Winslow. This study was funded by the NIH (DA1560505, MH R01#54907 and UL RR024131) and CMS contract No. 500-00-0046TO#2.

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