Literature DB >> 26562123

Housing Status, Medical Care, and Health Outcomes Among People Living With HIV/AIDS: A Systematic Review.

Angela A Aidala1, Michael G Wilson1, Virginia Shubert1, David Gogolishvili1, Jason Globerman1, Sergio Rueda1, Anne K Bozack1, Maria Caban1, Sean B Rourke1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Accumulating evidence suggests responses to HIV that combine individual-level interventions with those that address structural or contextual factors that influence risks and health outcomes of infection. Housing is such a factor. Housing occupies a strategic position as an intermediate structural factor, linking "upstream" economic, social, and cultural determinants to the more immediate physical and social environments in which everyday life is lived. The importance of housing status for HIV prevention and care has been recognized, but much of this attention has focused on homeless individuals as a special risk group. Analyses have less often addressed community housing availability and conditions as factors influencing population health or unstable, inadequate, or unaffordable housing as a situation or temporary state. A focus on individual-level characteristics associated with literal homelessness glosses over social, economic, and policy drivers operating largely outside any specific individual's control that affect housing and residential environments and the health resources or risk exposures such contexts provide.
OBJECTIVES: We examined the available empirical evidence on the association between housing status (broadly defined), medical care, and health outcomes among people with HIV and analyzed results to inform future research, program development, and policy implementation. SEARCH
METHODS: We searched 8 electronic health and social science databases from January 1, 1996, through March 31, 2014, using search terms related to housing, dwelling, and living arrangements and HIV and AIDS. We contacted experts for additional literature. SELECTION CRITERIA: We selected articles if they were quantitative analyses published in English, French, or Spanish that included at least 1 measure of housing status as an independent variable and at least 1 health status, health care, treatment adherence, or risk behavior outcome among people with HIV in high-income countries. We defined housing status to include consideration of material or social dimensions of housing adequacy, stability, and security of tenure. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Two independent reviewers performed data extraction and quality appraisal. We used the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool for randomized controlled trials and a modified version of the Newcastle Ottawa Quality Appraisal Tool for nonintervention studies. In our quality appraisal, we focused on issues of quality for observational studies: appropriate methods for determining exposure and measuring outcomes and methods to control confounding.
RESULTS: Searches yielded 5528 references from which we included 152 studies, representing 139,757 HIV-positive participants. Most studies were conducted in the United States and Canada. Studies examined access and utilization of HIV medical care, adherence to antiretroviral medications, HIV clinical outcomes, other health outcomes, emergency department and inpatient utilization, and sex and drug risk behaviors. With rare exceptions, across studies in all domains, worse housing status was independently associated with worse outcomes, controlling for a range of individual patient and care system characteristics.
CONCLUSIONS: Lack of stable, secure, adequate housing is a significant barrier to consistent and appropriate HIV medical care, access and adherence to antiretroviral medications, sustained viral suppression, and risk of forward transmission. Studies that examined the history of homelessness or problematic housing years before outcome assessment were least likely to find negative outcomes, homelessness being a potentially modifiable contextual factor. Randomized controlled trials and observational studies indicate an independent effect of housing assistance on improved outcomes for formerly homeless or inadequately housed people with HIV. Housing challenges result from complex interactions between individual vulnerabilities and broader economic, political, and legal structural determinants of health. The broad structural processes sustaining social exclusion and inequality seem beyond the immediate reach of HIV interventions, but changing housing and residential environments is both possible and promising.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26562123      PMCID: PMC4695926          DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2015.302905

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Public Health        ISSN: 0090-0036            Impact factor:   9.308


  171 in total

1.  Association of unmet needs for support services with medication use and adherence among HIV-infected individuals in the southeastern United States.

Authors:  S Reif; K Whetten; K Lowe; J Ostermann
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2006-05

2.  Substance abuse treatment utilization among adults living with HIV/AIDS and alcohol or drug problems.

Authors:  John Orwat; Richard Saitz; Christopher P Tompkins; Debbie M Cheng; Michael P Dentato; Jeffrey H Samet
Journal:  J Subst Abuse Treat       Date:  2011-06-22

3.  Chronic hepatitis C virus infection is associated with all-cause and liver-related mortality in a cohort of HIV-infected patients with alcohol problems.

Authors:  Daniel Fuster; Debbie M Cheng; Emily K Quinn; David Nunes; Richard Saitz; Jeffrey H Samet; Judith I Tsui
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2013-10-24       Impact factor: 6.526

4.  Antiretroviral therapy adherence: testing a social context model among Black men who use illicit drugs.

Authors:  J Craig Phillips
Journal:  J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care       Date:  2010-11-30       Impact factor: 1.354

5.  Emergency department utilization among a cohort of HIV-positive injecting drug users in a Canadian setting.

Authors:  Nadia Fairbairn; M-J Milloy; Ruth Zhang; Calvin Lai; Eric Grafstein; Thomas Kerr; Evan Wood
Journal:  J Emerg Med       Date:  2011-06-29       Impact factor: 1.484

6.  Antiretroviral therapy, hepatitis C virus, and AIDS mortality among San Francisco's homeless and marginally housed.

Authors:  Elise D Riley; David R Bangsberg; David Guzman; Sharon Perry; Andrew R Moss
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2005-02-01       Impact factor: 3.731

7.  Housing status and HIV risk behaviors among homeless and housed persons with HIV.

Authors:  Daniel P Kidder; Richard J Wolitski; Sherri L Pals; Michael L Campsmith
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2008-12-01       Impact factor: 3.731

8.  Factors associated with engaging socially marginalized HIV-positive persons in primary care.

Authors:  Maureen H Rumptz; Carol Tobias; Serena Rajabiun; Judith Bradford; Howard Cabral; Robin Young; William E Cunningham
Journal:  AIDS Patient Care STDS       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 5.078

9.  Recent drug use, homelessness and increased short-term mortality in HIV-infected persons with alcohol problems.

Authors:  Alexander Y Walley; Debbie M Cheng; Howard Libman; David Nunes; C Robert Horsburgh; Richard Saitz; Jeffrey H Samet
Journal:  AIDS       Date:  2008-01-30       Impact factor: 4.177

10.  Awareness of hepatitis C diagnosis is associated with less alcohol use among persons co-infected with HIV.

Authors:  Judith I Tsui; Richard Saitz; Debbie M Cheng; David Nunes; Howard Libman; Julie K Alperen; Jeffrey H Samet
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2007-02-23       Impact factor: 5.128

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  131 in total

1.  Advancing health equity to improve health: the time is now.

Authors:  B Jackson; P Huston
Journal:  Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can       Date:  2016-02       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Behavioural, social and structural-level risk factors for developing AIDS among HIV-positive people who use injection drugs in a Canadian setting, 1996-2017.

Authors:  S Ickowicz; H Dong; L Ti; S Nolan; N Fairbairn; R Barrios; M-J Milloy
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2020-05-31

3.  Enhancing Patient Navigation with Contingent Incentives to Improve Healthcare Behaviors and Viral Load Suppression of Persons with HIV and Substance Use.

Authors:  Maxine L Stitzer; Alexis S Hammond; Tim Matheson; James L Sorensen; Daniel J Feaster; Rui Duan; Lauren Gooden; Carlos Del Rio; Lisa R Metsch
Journal:  AIDS Patient Care STDS       Date:  2018-06-08       Impact factor: 5.078

4.  Comparison of HIV Viral Suppression Between a Sample of Foreign-Born and U.S.-Born Women of Color in the United States.

Authors:  Amanda Nace; Glen Johnson; Elizabeth Eastwood
Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health       Date:  2021-05-11

5.  The Care and Prevention in the United States Demonstration Project: A Call for More Focus on the Social Determinants of HIV/AIDS.

Authors:  Maria De Jesus; David R Williams
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  2018 Nov/Dec       Impact factor: 2.792

6.  Condomless Sex and Psychiatric Comorbidity in the Context of Constrained Survival Choices: A Longitudinal Study Among Homeless and Unstably Housed Women.

Authors:  Meredith C Meacham; Amber L Bahorik; Martha Shumway; Carina Marquez; Elise D Riley
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2019-03

7.  Simulating the End of AIDS in New York: Using Participatory Dynamic Modeling to Improve Implementation of the Ending the Epidemic Initiative.

Authors:  Erika G Martin; Roderick H MacDonald; Daniel E Gordon; Carol-Ann Swain; Travis O'Donnell; John Helmeset; Adenantera Dwicaksono; James M Tesoriero
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  2020 Jul/Aug       Impact factor: 2.792

8.  The Effect of Sleeping Environment and Sleeping Location Change on Positive Airway Pressure Adherence.

Authors:  Han Yu S Liou; Vishesh K Kapur; Flavia Consens; Martha E Billings
Journal:  J Clin Sleep Med       Date:  2018-10-15       Impact factor: 4.062

9.  Punto Seguro: A Randomized Controlled Pilot Using Conditional Economic Incentives to Reduce Sexually Transmitted Infection Risks in Mexico.

Authors:  Omar Galárraga; Sandra G Sosa-Rubí; Caroline Kuo; Pedro Gozalo; Andrea González; Biani Saavedra; Nathalie Gras-Allain; Carlos J Conde-Glez; Maria Olamendi-Portugal; Kenneth H Mayer; Don Operario
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2017-12

10.  Residential Stability Reduces Unmet Health Care Needs and Emergency Department Utilization among a Cohort of Homeless and Vulnerably Housed Persons in Canada.

Authors:  Denise Jaworsky; Anne Gadermann; Arnaud Duhoux; Trudy E Naismith; Monica Norena; Matthew J To; Stephen W Hwang; Anita Palepu
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2016-08       Impact factor: 3.671

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