| Literature DB >> 29650047 |
Andrea Parriott1, Mohsen Malekinejad2, Amanda P Miller2, Suzanne M Marks3, Hacsi Horvath2, James G Kahn2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Homelessness increases the risk of tuberculosis (TB) disease and latent TB infection (LTBI), but persons experiencing homelessness often lack access to testing and treatment. We assessed the yield of TB testing and linkage to care for programs targeting homeless populations in the United States.Entities:
Keywords: Adults; Health disparities; Health services; Homelessness; Public health; Targeted testing; Tuberculosis; United States
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29650047 PMCID: PMC5897923 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5393-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart. Process of identification and screening of citations from article databases, targeted testing and linkage to care studies among homeless populations in the United States
Characteristics of 23 TB targeted testing and linkage to care studies among homeless populations in the United States
| Author and year | Data collection years | City/county, State | Target population | Recruitment method | Number of valid test results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barry 1986 [ | 1984 | Boston, Massachusetts | Homeless adults | Shelter-based | 187 |
| McAdam 1990 [ | 1982-1988 | New York, New York | Homeless adults | Shelter-based | 1508 |
| Torres 1990 [ | 1986-1989 | New York, New York | Individuals staying at a “Gay Mens” Shelter on Ward Island | Shelter, and healthcare facility-based | 94 |
| Nolan 1991 [ | 1985 | Seattle, Washington | Homeless men | Shelter-based | 93 |
| Neims 1992 [ | Not reported | Baltimore, Maryland | Individuals who spent at least one night in a homeless shelter in the previous year. | Shelter, healthcare facility, and other service-based | 57 |
| Paul 1993 [ | 1990 | New York, New York | Homeless men | Shelter-based | 98 |
| Gelberg 1997 [ | 1991 or 1992- not reported | Los Angeles, California | Homeless adults | Participants were recruited from a separate longitudinal cohort of homeless persons conducted by the RAND Corporation; the RAND cohort was recruited using a combination of shelter-based, meal program-based, and street-based recruitment | 260 |
| Morrow 1997 [ | Not reported | Yonkers, New York | Underserved men and women using the shelter’s services (food, clinic, sleeping there) | Shelter-based | 95 |
| Sakai 1998 [ | 1996 | New Orleans, Louisiana | Homeless men | Shelter-based | 105 |
| Bock 1999 [ | 1994-1996 | Atlanta, Georgia | “High- risk” inner city residents | Healthcare facility-based | 2002 |
| Griffin 1999 [ | 1997-1998 | Kansasa City, Missouri | Homeless adults | Shelter-based | 654 |
| Kimerling 1999 [ | 1996-1996 | Birmingham, Alabama | Homeless adults | Shelter-based | 21 |
| Falchook 2000 [ | 1998-1999 | New Orleans, Louisiana | Homeless adults | Shelter-based | 54 |
| Kong 2002 [ | 1995-1998 | Denver, Colorado | Residents of communal shelters and residential drug and alcohol treatment programs | Shelter and other service-based | 10,207 |
| Cheung 2002 [ | 1995-2000 | Menlo Park, California | VA-eligible homeless adults | Healthcare facility-based | 829 |
| Saez 2002 [ | 1990-1992 | New York City, New York | Mentally ill homeless men | Shelter and healthcare facility-based | 75 |
| Forman 2003 [ | 2001 | Anchorage, Alaska | Homeless adults | Shelter-based | 47 |
| Valencia 2004 [ | Not reported | New York, New York | Mentally ill homeless men | Shelter-based | 173 |
| Dewan 2006 [ | 2003-2005 | San Francisco, California | Homeless adults | Healthcare facility-based | 2559 |
| Lashley 2007 [ | 2005-2007 | Baltimore, Maryland | Homeless adults in or recently graduated from a residential addictions recovery program | Shelter-based | 282 |
| McAdam 2009 [ | 1992-2006 | New York, New York | Homeless persons attending shelters and drop-in facilities | Shelter and other service-based | 21,028 |
| Alexander 2011 [ | 2009-2011 | County not reported, Indiana | Homeless adults | Shelter-based with street outreach component: health fairs and another event offering legal, social and health services to the homeless. | 1421 |
| Higashi 2014 [ | 2005-2009 | San Francisco, California | Homeless adults | Healthcare facility-based | 10,935 |
Fig. 2Cumulative proportion of homeless populations retained in each cascade step. TB targeted testing and linkage to care in the United States. TST-based studies only. Proportions retained from each step to the next are displayed in the table below
Fig. 3Proportions testing positive of those with valid results by year in homeless populations. TB targeted testing and linkage to care in the United States. TST-based studies only. Midpoint year of data collection was used when data collection accrued over multiple years
Proportions for select steps in TB targeted testing cascade among homeless persons, by recruitment method
| Cascade Step | Number of studies* | N | Proportion | 95% CI | Number of studies* | N | Proportion | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthcare facility based | Other service based** | ||||||||
| Recruited of reached | 1 | 829 | 100% | 99.5 to 100% | 1 | 750 | 78.1% | 75.0 to 80.9% | < 0.001 |
| Tests placed of recruited | 2 | 923 | 100% | 99.9 to 100% | 5 | 2775 | 95.2% | 80.8 to 100% | 0.081 |
| Valid results of tests placed | 4 | 3926 | 93.9% | 65.1 to 91.1% | 6 | 26,839 | 78.6% | 70.8 to 85.5% | 0.247 |
| Positive of valid results | 4 | 3000 | 33.6% | 18.0 to 51.2% | 11 | 33,661 | 23.5% | 19.1 to 28.3% | 0.249 |
| Referred to follow-up of positive | 1 | 33 | 100% | 89.6 to 100% | 2 | 113 | 100% | 98.3 to 100% | 1.000 |
| Attended follow-up of referred | 1 | 33 | 100% | 89.6 to 100% | 2 | 113 | 100% | 98.3 to 100% | 1.000 |
*Not all studies reported data on all cascade steps
**Other service based recruitment includes recruitment from shelters, single room occupancy hotels, drop-in/day centers, substance abuse treatment facilities, meal programs, and other agencies that provide services to a primarily homeless or very low income clientele