| Literature DB >> 28265804 |
John Christian Hague1, Betsey John2, Linda Goldman2, Kshema Nagavedu2, Sophie Lewis2, Rebecca Hawrusik2, Serena Rajabiun3, Noelle Cocoros2, H Dawn Fukuda2, Kevin Cranston2.
Abstract
HIV-associated laboratory tests reported to public health surveillance have been used as a proxy measure of care engagement of HIV+ individuals. As part of a Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Special Projects of National Significance (SPNS) Initiative, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (MDPH) worked with three pilot clinical facilities to identify HIV+ patients whose last HIV laboratory test occurred at the participating facility but who then appeared to be out of care, defined as an absence of HIV laboratory test results reported to MDPH for at least 6 months. The clinical facilities then reviewed medical records to determine whether these patients were actually not in care, or if there was another reason that they did not have a laboratory test performed, and provided feedback to MDPH on each of the presumed out-of-care patients. In the first year of the pilot project, 37% of patients who appeared to be out of care based on laboratory data were confirmed to be out of care after review of clinical health records. Of those patients who were confirmed to be out of care, 55% had a subsequent laboratory test within 3 months, and 72% had a laboratory test within 6 months, indicating that they had re-engaged with a care provider. MDPH found that it was essential to have clinical staff confirm the care status of patients who were presumed to be out of care based on surveillance data.Entities:
Keywords: Care engagement; HIV laboratory surveillance; Linkage; Out-of-care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 28265804 PMCID: PMC6353809 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-017-1742-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1Flow diagram of laboratory test ordering from facilities in Massachusetts. Laboratory tests are sometimes sent through different facilities or reference laboratories. When the laboratory result is reported to MHASP, the “Facility Name” will sometimes reflect the facility where the sample was tested, not necessarily the ordering facility. However, the “Provider Name” field is a more accurate means of identifying the correct ordering facility
Fig. 2The proportion of patients confirmed OOC versus not confirmed OOC (with reason not OOC) after receiving clinical staff feedback regarding patients on the presumed OOC line list, June 2013–May 2014
Demographic and risk/exposure mode for patients who appeared on the presumed out-of-care line list
| Confirmed out-of-care | Not confirmed out-of-care | |
|---|---|---|
| N = 421 | N = 716 | |
| Birth sex | ||
| Male | 261 (62) | 451 (63) |
| Female | 160 (38) | 265 (37) |
| Age category | ||
| 20–29 years | 21 (5) | 29 (4) |
| 30–39 years | 76 (18) | 93 (13) |
| 40–49 years | 122 (29) | 179 (25) |
| 50–59 years | 151 (36) | 279 (39) |
| 60 and older | 51 (12) | 136 (19) |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| Non-Hispanic white | 139 (33) | 222 (31) |
| Non-Hispanic black | 134 (32) | 286 (40) |
| Hispanic/Latino | 143 (34) | 186 (26) |
| Other/unknown | 5 (1) | 22 (3) |
| Risk/exposure mode | ||
| MSM | 93 (22) | 165 (23) |
| IDU | 126 (30) | 179 (25) |
| MSM/IDU | 14 (3) | 29 (4) |
| Heterosexuala | 88 (21) | 150 (21) |
| Presumed Heterosexualb | 50 (12) | 86 (12) |
| Other/unknown | 50 (12) | 107 (15) |
MSM male sex with male, IDU injection drug user
aHeterosexual exposure includes high-risk heterosexual contact, defined as heterosexual contact with an MSM, IDU, or Person Living with HIV/AIDS
bPresumed heterosexual = females reported heterosexual contact, but not high-risk