| Literature DB >> 26123158 |
Baligh R Yehia1,2, Leslie Stewart3, Florence Momplaisir4, Aaloke Mody5, Carol W Holtzman6, Lisa M Jacobs7, Janet Hines8, Karam Mounzer9,10, Karen Glanz11,12, Joshua P Metlay13, Judy A Shea14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Retention in HIV care improves survival and reduces the risk of HIV transmission to others. Multiple quantitative studies have described demographic and clinical characteristics associated with retention in HIV care. However, qualitative studies are needed to better understand barriers and facilitators.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26123158 PMCID: PMC4485864 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-015-0990-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Sample demographic and clinical characteristics, overall and by retention in care status
| Characteristica | Total | Retained in careh | Not retained in careh |
|---|---|---|---|
| (N = 51) | (N = 25) | (N = 26) | |
| Age (years)b | |||
| 18-29 | 4 (8 %) | 1 (4 %) | 3 (12 %) |
| 30-39 | 11 (22 %) | 2 (8 %) | 9 (35 %) |
| 40-49 | 18 (35 %) | 10 (40 %) | 8 (31 %) |
| ≥50 | 18 (35 %) | 12 (48 %) | 6 (23 %) |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 27 (53 %) | 19 (76 %) | 8 (31 %) |
| Female | 24 (47 %) | 6 (24 %) | 18 (69 %) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |||
| White | 6 (12 %) | 3 (12 %) | 3 (12 %) |
| Black | 41 (80 %) | 21 (84 %) | 20 (77 %) |
| Hispanic | 3 (6 %) | 1 (4 %) | 2 (8 %) |
| Other | 1 (2 %) | 0 (0 %) | 1 (4 %) |
| HIV risk factorc | |||
| MSM | 13 (26 %) | 8 (32 %) | 5 (19 %) |
| Heterosexual | 35 (69 %) | 14 (56 %) | 21 (81 %) |
| IDU | 3 (6 %) | 3 (12 %) | 0 (0 %) |
| Insuranced | |||
| Private | 4 (8 %) | 1 (4 %) | 3 (12 %) |
| Medicaid | 34 (67 %) | 17 (68 %) | 17 (65 %) |
| Medicare | 10 (18 %) | 6 (24 %) | 4 (15 %) |
| Uninsured | 3 (6 %) | 1 (4 %) | 2 (8 %) |
| ART regimene | |||
| PI | 29 (57 %) | 16 (64 %) | 13 (50 %) |
| NNRTI | 15 (29 %) | 7 (28 %) | 8 (31 %) |
| Integrase | 5 (10 %) | 2 (8 %) | 3 (12 %) |
| Not on ART | 2 (4 %) | 0 (0 %) | 2 (8 %) |
| CD4 cell count (cell/mm3)f | |||
| ≤ 200 | 8 (16 %) | 6 (24 %) | 2 (8 %) |
| 201-350 | 8 (16 %) | 2 (8 %) | 6 (23 %) |
| 351-500 | 8 (16 %) | 4 (16 %) | 4 (15 %) |
| > 500 | 27 (53 %) | 13 (52 %) | 14 (54 %) |
| Viral suppressiong | |||
| Suppressed | 29 (57 %) | 17 (68 %) | 12 (46 %) |
| Not suppressed | 22 (43 %) | 8 (32 %) | 14 (54 %) |
Abbreviations: ART antiretroviral therapy, MSM men who have sex with men, IDU injection drug use, PI protease inhibitor, NNRTI non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
aCharacteristics and values within the 12-month period prior to interview date
bAge on the date of interview
cPatients who had IDU in combination with another risk factor (e.g. MSM, HET) were classified as IDU
dPatients with both Medicare and Medicaid were grouped as Medicare
ePatients were considered to be on ART if they concomitantly received ≥ 3 antiretroviral drugs (excluding ritonavir) during the 12-month period prior to the interview date. ART regimen prescribed closest to the interview date was grouped using the following hierarchy: (1) PI-based; (2) NNRTI-based; and (3) integrase inhibitor-based
fCD4 cell count closest to the date of interview
gHIV viral suppression was categorized as suppressed (HIV-1 RNA ≤ 400 copies/mL) and not suppressed (HIV-1 RNA > 400 copies/mL) based on the median value in the 12-month period before the interview date
hRetention in care was defined as completing 2 or more primary HIV care visits separated by ≥ 90 days in the 12-month period prior to the interview date
Barriers to retention in care for people living with HIV
| Barriers | Selected patient quotes | Total patients | Retained | Not retained |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Competing Life Activities | “Of course, mother of four. Work 40-hour full-time job, come home to a full-time job, single mom. So yeah, I mean, there are times, like I said, from exhaustion. Sometimes – most times, it’s just sheer exhaustion. I’m tired, you know. Before I know it, I’m asleep somewhere and I’m sleeping so long, it’s the next day. But when I get up, I will take it. It’s far and few between, but it happens. It happens.” -NR Female | High | High | High |
| 2. Feeling Sick | “Maybe because it was cold or it was raining and I was sick and I didn’t feel like coming, even though I was sick, because I know like in the past I will be feeling sick as hell, but I couldn’t even have the strength to get up to come to see the doctor.” -R Female | High | High | High |
| 3. Stigma | “You don’t want to see nobody you know and all that kind of stuff. I hate the waiting room, I wish I could put on my hood and walk right through there when I leave.” | High | Medium | High |
| -R Male | ||||
| 4. Depression & Mental Illness | “It impacts a lot. It can impact a lot especially depending on I guess my emotional state. Depending on how bad I feel I’m not gonna move at all, I’m just not gonna come out the house, no matter what the reason that may have brought it on, whether it was me, an argument or fight with my husband, the kids driving me crazy today, no matter what brought it on, depending on how bad I feel, I’m just not gonna come because of my depression.” -NR Female | High | High | High |
| 5. Expensive & Unreliable Transportation | “Well, what makes it hard sometimes if you don’t have money to get here. If you don’t have a car, that’s one thing. And what makes it easy is when you have transportation to come here. And it’s accessible if you’re on a bus route. It’s right on the [Specific bus route]. It’s easy to get here. And that’s about it. Sometime you can’t come because you don’t have the money. That’s a factor.” -NR Male | High | Medium | High |
| 6. Insufficient Health Insurance | “I’d say about the last two years, it’s gotten to a point whereas though things they used to cover they don’t cover no more. And being – having this disease, we need a lot of things done. They don’t send out no letter, no nothing, just saying you can’t have this done no more or it’s going to be an extra charge. They don’t say nothing. I get to the place like the dentist. I have bone loss. And I had an appointment. I went to the appointment, and they’re telling me it’s not covered.” -R Male | Medium | Low | High |
| 7. Forgetfulness | “If I’m rushing out of the house and I forget to just grab them and put them in my purse or something. That’s most of the time when I forget.” -R Female | Medium | Medium | Medium |
| 8. Substance Abuse | “I forgot a lot of appointments. I was on drugs and I didn’t – I wouldn’t come in for like months, six months, to a year. I’m just getting back on track.” -R Female | Medium | Medium | Medium |
| 9. Negative Experiences with Clinic Spaces & Processes | “I still went…He just run in and out of the office, leave me sitting – first of all, you sat an hour just to get triaged. Then they stuck in a room, you sat another half an hour, 45 min. Then he’d come and he’s be on the phone, he’d be in and out, just write you a script and send you on your way. Every once in a while he gave you blood work. Back then it was like an easy gig. But I left him and I found – the Gods called up, no for real man, it was a blessing.” -R Male | Medium | Medium | Medium |
| 10. Challenges with Appointment Scheduling | “Then if I come to appointment, I have to schedule back and forth. She say 11:30, but on the paper I got last time, it was 12:30. So I get her 12:00, she say it’s too late, I have to go back and reschedule. And I rescheduled again for the 26th, it took another month.” -NR Female | Low | Low | Medium |
| 11. Difficult Relationships with Clinic Staff Including Providers | “The social worker, [Participant’s Social Worker], and I am not a fan of her. I am not a fan of her. She thinks she’s here doing you a favor. She is manipulative, ring the rule, send you up the steps and down and around and about and then all around. I cannot take that social worker behavior. Just get to the point and lead me in the right direction and tell me what the steps to take. I’m not here to ask you for a handout or what you can offer me personally from a clinical standpoint, a professional standpoint, please assist me with this matter. She make it seem as if she is doing you a favor.” -R Female | Low | Low | Medium |
| 12. Inconsistent, Unstable, or Inadequate Housing | “I’m going through a situation right now with my living conditions. I haven’t took my medications in about three weeks now. I discussed - because I am going through – I’m living right now in a warehouse with my cousin who was also evicted because of some of the legal bullcrap we had to go through with my niece and other stuff which annoys me. But right now I’m staying with him so I’m going through a lot of stress with that. I guess I could have continued taking it but I just never been down to get the pills or whatnot.” -R Male | Low | Low | Low |
Abbreviations: R retained, NR not retained
The frequency for each identified barrier to retention in care was categorized into tertiles: high, medium, low
Facilitators to retention in care for people living with HIV
| Facilitator | Selected patient quotes | Total patients | Retained | Not retained |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Positive Relationships with Clinic Staff Including Provider | “When Dr. [Doctor’s Name] speaks, I take it to heart because I know he is really concerned about me. I don’t know about every other doctor. I can only tell you about Dr. [Doctor’s Name]. I know he’s concerned and I know his concerns are valid so when he suggests or says, okay, [Name], I always try to do it.” -R Male | High | High | High |
| 2. Social Support | “Sometimes I’m not able to go to the food bank, but I’ll call my children. I’ve called my two daughters or my son, and somebody will drop something off. They say, ma, we don’t want you to be there and not have nothing to eat. We know it’s important that you’ve got to take your medicines. So sometimes when I can’t make it to the food bank, they look out for me and bring me something over to the house.” -R Female | High | High | High |
| 3. Patient-friendly Clinic Services | “Because they give you transportation back and forth… So they make sure I have that when I come. So there’s really no excuse.” -R Female | High | High | High |
| “They usually call me the day before or a couple days before and I usually put it in my phone on my calendar.” -NR Male | ||||
| “So it’s just convenient that everything is in one place, I can go to the doctors, I can get my medicine, I can go to my groups, and I can do this all in one, between the two buildings.” -NR Female | ||||
| 4. Patient Initiated Reminder Strategies | I: “What things help you making your appointments?” | Low | Low | Medium |
| R: “The alarm on my phone. It’s aggravating. I’ll turn it off, it’ll turn back on… Yeah. I fixed it that way. I got five alarms and I’ll set them all 10 min apart.” -R Male | ||||
| 5. Flexible Schedule | “Basically just me. I just will go. I mean I try to schedule where I don’t have nothing to do that week. When nothing else is coming up and if I have an appointment, it will just be my appointment that I have to go to that week without anything else bothering me. Clearing it out, yeah.” -R Female | Low | Low | Low |
Abbreviations: R retained, NR not retained
The frequency for each identified facilitator to retention in care was categorized into tertiles: high, medium, low