Abstract
Tremendous strides have been made in the diagnosis and treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV); perhaps now the largest barrier to controlling HIV is retaining those diagnosed in care. Data on out-of-care populations are needed to develop effective retention methods, yet obtaining these remains methodologically challenging due to inherent difficulties in sampling. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether individuals identified by two sampling methods commonly used to approximate out-of-care populations were significantly different from a sample of newly identified out-of-care persons. We compared medical records of 345 out-of-care persons identified by a novel population-based health information exchange who had not received CD4 or viral load monitoring in >1 year with: medical records from a randomly selected, time-matched sample of 488 HIV-infected persons with at least one HIV care visit in the past 5 years, and interviews with 382 participants from a time-matched clinic-based convenience sample. Newly identified out-of-care persons were significantly different from both proxies with respect to demographic, clinical, and utilization characteristics, suggesting that samples of in-care proxy persons are inadequate to describe those not engaged in care. Novel approaches to sampling out-of care populations are urgently needed in order to better understand these populations and ways to improve retention and slow the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
Acknowledgements
For their assistance and expertise throughout the study, the authors acknowledge Ms Amy Zapata, Ms Beth Scalco, Mr George Stephens, Dr Debbie Wendell, Ms Michelle Murtaza-Rossini, Mr Damien Cuffie, Ms Susan Bergson, and Dr Michael K. Butler (currently Executive Vice President and Chief Medical Officer of the Jackson Health System, Miami, FL). This study could not have been conducted without the enormous support of personnel from Louisiana State University (LSU) Health Care Services Division (HCSD), Louisiana Office of Public Health (OPH), and Louisiana Public Health Institute (LPHI). For their participation in and support of LaPHIE, the study team would like to acknowledge the patients in the system and all the health care providers without whom this study would not have been possible. This publication was supported in part by the District of Columbia Developmental Center for AIDS Research (DC D-CFAR), an NIH-funded program (P30AI087714).
This study was funded in part by a grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration, Special Projects of National Significance within the HIV/AIDS Bureau, HRSA Grant #H97HA08476. All co-authors have reviewed and approved this paper. The content of this publication does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of DHHS/HRSA and responsibility for the content rests solely with the authors.