| Literature DB >> 29368619 |
Suparna Das1, Jenevieve Opoku2, Michael Kharfen3, Adam Allston2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Concurrent with the UNAIDS 90-90-90 and NHAS plans, the District of Columbia (DC) launched its 90/90/90/50 plan (Plan) in 2015. The Plan proposes that by 2020, 90% of all DC residents will know their HIV status; 90% of residents living with HIV will be in sustained treatment; 90% of those in treatment will reach "Viral Suppression" and DC will achieve 50% reduction of new HIV cases. To achieve these goals targeted prevention strategies are imperative for areas where the relative risk (RR) of not being linked to care (NL), not retained in any care (NRC) and low viral suppression (NVSP) are highest in the District. These outcomes are denoted in this study as poor outcomes of HIV care continuum. This study applies the Bayesian model for RR for area specific random effects to identify the census tracts with poor HIV care continuum outcomes for DC.Entities:
Keywords: Area based prevention intervention strategies; Bayesian relative risk; Disease mapping; District of Columbia; HIV care continuum
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29368619 PMCID: PMC5784661 DOI: 10.1186/s12981-018-0189-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Ther ISSN: 1742-6405 Impact factor: 2.250
Fig. 1The boundary map of District of Columbia, delineating Wards, Neighbourhoods and Census Tracts
Social, economic and demographic characteristics of wards in District of Columbia
| Variables | Ward 1 | Ward 2 | Ward 3 | Ward 4 | Ward 5 | Ward 6 | Ward 7 | Ward 8 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total populationa | 82,859 | 77,645 | 83,152 | 83,066 | 82,049 | 84,290 | 73,290 | 81,133 |
| Malea | 49.90 | 50.5 | 44.7 | 48.60 | 47.20 | 47.90 | 46.30 | 43.80 |
| Femalea | 50.10 | 49.50 | 55.30 | 51.40 | 52.80 | 52.10 | 53.70 | 56.20 |
| Whitea | 56.70 | 77.20 | 83.90 | 28.40 | 22.10 | 58.00 | 3.00 | 5.40 |
| Black and African Americana | 31.50 | 9.80 | 8.50 | 57.90 | 71.90 | 36.80 | 95.20 | 93.60 |
| Unemployment ratea | 5.10 | 2.70 | 2.60 | 6.90 | 9.00 | 4.70 | 11 | 12.70 |
| High school educationa | 87.7 | 94.90 | 97.60 | 87.10 | 86.30 | 92.60 | 83.0 | 83.0 |
a Office of planning, District of Columbia
Care continuum outcome measures followed in DC
| Measure | Definition | Levels |
|---|---|---|
| HIV cases living in DC | Number of cases diagnosed with HIV through 2015 and presumed living in DC at the end of 2016 | |
| Linkage to care | Evidence of diagnosis date to first CD4 and/or viral load laboratory | Living in DC; any evidence of a CD4 and/or viral load after initial lab in DC |
| Retained in care | Stability of care in 2016 | Two viral load and/or CD4 labs reported more than 90 days apart in the year |
| Virally suppressed | Suppression any time after HIV disease diagnosis | Suppressed: reported viral load ≤ 200copies/ml |
Fig. 2Maps of simple rates (left), raw SMRs (middle) of not linked to HIV care compared to smoothed Relative Risks from Poisson log normal model (right) in District of Columbia (2010–2015)
Fig. 3Maps of simple rates (left), raw SMRs (left) of not retained in any care compared to smoothed Relative Risks from Poisson log normal model (right) in District of Columbia (2010–2015)
Fig. 4Maps of simple rates (left), raw SMRs (left) of not retained in any care compared to smoothed Relative Risks from Poisson log normal model (right) in District of Columbia (2010–2015)
Posterior statistics of the variance components and model
| Not linked to care | Not retained to care | Not virally suppressed | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | STD dev | Credible interval | Mean | STD dev | Credible interval | Mean | STD dev | Credible interval | |||
| α | − 0.2389 | 0.09904 | − 0.4424, − 0.05504 | α | − 0.3182 | 0.09017 | − 0.5017, -0.1474 | α | − 0.4891 | 0.096 | − 0.6847, − 0.3074 |
|
| 34.21 | 247.8 | 0.3736, 276.1 |
| 233.4 | 790.1 | 0.9515, 2544 |
| 0.8418 | 1.429 | 0.2251, 3.847 |
|
| 639.7 | 1231 | 1.369, 4364 |
| 1.578 | 0.4645 | 0.9697, 2.708 |
| 541.2 | 1192 | 0.9033, 4113 |
| DIC | 442.8 | DIC | 664.7 | DIC | 484.7 | ||||||
| PD | 21.78 | PD | 80.63 | PD | − 28.41 | ||||||
Fig. 5Posterior expectation of u (correlated heterogeneity) for the Bayesian model