| Literature DB >> 25631320 |
Arpi S Terzian1, Mary K Irvine2, Laura M Hollod2, Sungwoo Lim2, John Rojas2, Colin W Shepard2.
Abstract
The federal Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS (HOPWA) program addresses housing needs of low-income persons living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA). The New York City (NYC) Department of Health and Mental Hygiene oversees 22 HOPWA contracts for over 2,400 clients, and manages the NYC HIV Registry. HOPWA clients (N = 1,357) were matched to a random 20 % sample of other PLWHA (N = 13,489). Groups were compared on HIV care retention, viral suppression, and rebound. HOPWA clients were, on average, 3 years younger and more likely to be concurrently diagnosed with HIV and AIDS. While HOPWA clients were more likely to be retained in care (94 vs. 82 %; mOR = 2.97, 95 % CI 2.35-3.74), they were no more likely to achieve suppression (84 vs. 86 %; mOR = 0.85, 95 % 0.70-1.03) and were more likely to rebound (11 vs. 7 %; mOR = 1.45; 95 % CI 1.10-1.91). HIV care retention does not fully translate to virologic suppression in this low-income service population.Entities:
Keywords: Engagement in care; Epidemiology; HIV infection/prevention and control; Housing; Public health surveillance
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25631320 PMCID: PMC4598342 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-015-1003-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1Flow chart of NYC DOHMH-administered HOPWA program client eligibility for analysis
Selected characteristics of NYC DOHMH-administered HOPWA program clients and a random sample of other NYC PLWHA
| NYC HOPWA clients | Random sample of other PLWHA | |
|---|---|---|
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| Risk | ||
| MSM |
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| Heterosexuala |
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| IDU |
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| Other/Unknown |
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| Age in years as of December 31, 2011 | ||
| Mean |
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| Median [IQR] |
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| Sex | ||
| Male |
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| Female |
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| Race/ethnicityb | ||
| Non-Hispanic Black |
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| Hispanic |
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| Non-Hispanic White |
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| Other |
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| Borough of residence at diagnosisc | ||
| Bronx |
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| Brooklyn |
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| Manhattan |
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| Queens |
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| Staten Island |
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| Outside of NYC |
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| Unknown/Missing |
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| Neighborhood-level povertyd | ||
| 0 to <10 % |
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| 10 to <20 % |
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| 20 to <30 % |
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| 30 to 100 % |
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| Missing |
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| Country of origin | ||
| US |
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| Foreigne |
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| Unknown |
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| History of incarcerationf | ||
| Yes |
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| No |
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| Missing |
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| Enrolled in other HIV public assistance programs in 2011 | ||
| Yes |
|
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| No |
|
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| Provider type at diagnosis | ||
| Outpatient facility |
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| Inpatient facility |
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| Screening/diagnostic/referral |
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| Other |
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| Missing |
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| Concurrent HIV/AIDS diagnosisg | ||
| Yes |
|
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| No |
|
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| AIDS as of December 31, 2011 | ||
| |
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| Median [IQR] year of diagnosis |
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| Total number of unique test dates in 2011 | ||
| |
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| Mean [median, IQR] |
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| Last CD4 count in 2010 (cells/mm3) | ||
| 0–199 |
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| 200–349 |
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| 350–499 |
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| ≥500 |
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| Missing |
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| Duration of enrollment as of 12/31/2010, years (median [IQR]) | 1.58 [0.4–3.0] | N/A |
| Housing type | ||
| Housing placement assistance | 415 (31) | N/A |
| Rental assistance | 366 (27) | |
| Supportive permanent housing | 576 (42) | |
| Duration of enrollment by housing type, years (median [IQR]) | ||
| Housing placement assistance | 0.33 [0.1–0.7] | N/A |
| Rental assistance | 2.91 [1.3–3.0] | |
| Supportive permanent housing | 2.67 [1.3–3.0] | |
Numbers in bold denote statistical significance at the 0.05 level. Data as reported to the NYC DOHMH by September 30, 2012
PLWHA persons living with HIV/AIDS, HOPWA Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS, VL viral load, NYC New York City, MSM men who have sex with men, IDU injection drug users, Med median, IQR interquartile range
aThis transmission risk category includes heterosexual sex with an HIV-infected person, an injection drug user, or a person who has received blood products. For females only, heterosexual risk also includes sex with a male and at least one of the following: history of commercial sex work, multiple male sex partners, sexually transmitted infections, crack/cocaine use, sex with a bisexual male, probable heterosexual transmission as noted in a medical chart, or negative history of injection drug use
bDue to small numbers, persons reporting more than one race, Native Americans or Alaskan Natives, Hawaiian Natives, Asians, and Pacific Islanders were classified as ‘Other’ race/ethnicity
cBorough of residence refers to the residence at HIV diagnosis for persons living HIV (non-AIDS) or residence at AIDS diagnosis for persons living with AIDS
dNeighborhood-level poverty, based on ZIP code at HIV or AIDS diagnosis, defined as percent of residents with incomes below 100 % of the Federal Poverty Level per American Community Survey Census 2000
eForeign refers to people known to have been born outside the US or US dependencies
fData on history of incarceration are incomplete
gHIV cases concurrently diagnosed with AIDS (within 31 days of HIV diagnosis)
HIV-related care outcomes by NYC HOPWA status, 2011
| NYC HOPWA clients | Random sample of other PLWHA | |
|---|---|---|
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| |
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| Retention in carea | ||
| Yes |
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| No |
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| Viral suppressionb | ||
| Yes |
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| No |
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| Durable viral suppressionc | ||
| Yes |
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| No |
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| Viral reboundd | ||
| Yes |
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| No |
|
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Numbers in bold denote statistical significance at the 0.05 level. Data as reported to the NYC DOHMH by September 30, 2012
NYC HOPWA New York City Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS, PLWHA persons living with HIV/AIDS, VL viral load
aRetention in care defined as having ≥2 lab results ≥3 months apart in 2011
bViral suppression defined as having ≥1 VL ≤200 copies/mL in 2011, among those with at least 1 VL in 2011
cDurable suppression defined as having ≥2 consecutive VLs ≤200 copies/mL at least 2 weeks apart in 2011, among those with at least 2 VLs in 2011
dViral rebound defined as having ≥1 VL >200 copies/mL after ≥2 VLs ≤200 copies/mL at least 2 weeks apart in 2011, among those with at least 3 VLs in 2011
Results of unmatched and matched logistic regressions of NYC HOPWA enrollment on measures of engagement in care, 2011
|
| Unmatched OR (95 % CI) | Full optimal match ORa (95 % CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retention in careb | 14,468 |
|
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| Viral suppressionc | 13,652 |
| 0.92 (0.79, 1.08) |
| Durable viral suppressiond | 9,972 |
| 0.85 (0.70, 1.03) |
| Viral rebounde | 7, 457 |
|
|
Numbers in bold denote statistical significance at the 0.05 level. Data as reported to the NYC DOHMH by September 30, 2012
NYC HOPWA New York City Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS, VL viral load, OR odds ratio, CI confidence interval
aMatched for race/ethnicity, age at the end of 2011, sex, neighborhood-level poverty, transmission risk, country of origin, concurrent diagnosis (HIV & AIDS), enrollment in other local HIV public assistance programs in 2011, and last CD4 count as of the end of 2010. Neighborhood-level poverty, based on ZIP code at HIV or AIDS diagnosis, represents the percent of residents living below the federally defined threshold for poverty, and is categorized as: 0 to <10 %; 10 to <20 %; 20 to <30 %; and 30 to 100 %
bRetention in care defined as having ≥2 lab results ≥3 months apart in 2011
cViral suppression defined as having ≥1 VL ≤200 copies/mL in 2011, among those with at least 1 VL in 2011
dDurable suppression defined as having ≥2 consecutive VLs ≤200 copies/mL at least 2 weeks apart in 2011, among those with at least 2 VLs in 2011
eViral rebound defined as having ≥1 VL >200 copies/mL after ≥2 VLs ≤200 copies/mL at least 2 weeks apart in 2011, among those with at least 3 VLs in 2011