| Literature DB >> 35122577 |
Linda Yu1, Amee Madura2, Claudia Gil2, Paul Hepfer3, Kartika Palar4.
Abstract
Food insecurity disproportionately affects rural communities and people living with HIV (PLHIV). The Food Access Pilot Project (FAPP) was a California state-funded program that provided home-delivered, medically supportive meals via online meal vendors to food-insecure PLHIV in three rural counties. We performed longitudinal, retrospective analyses of FAPP participant data (n = 158; 504 and 460 person-time observations for viral load and CD4 count, respectively) over 36 months from a Ryan White client management database. Pre-post analyses demonstrated increased prevalence of food security and CD4 ≥ 500 between baseline and 12 months. Population-averaged trends using generalized estimating equations adjusted for participant demographics demonstrated increased odds of viral suppression and CD4 ≥ 500, and increased CD4 count (cells/mm3) for every six months of program enrollment. Home-delivered, medically supportive meals may improve food security status, HIV viral suppression, and immune health for low-income PLHIV in rural settings.Entities:
Keywords: Food security; Food support; HIV; Medically supportive food; Rural
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35122577 PMCID: PMC9252945 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-022-03589-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1Viral load and CD4 count data completion in ARIES, per 6-month interval
FAPP participant demographics and clinical characteristics at baseline, by county (n = 191)
| Characteristic | County | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall (n = 191) | San Joaquin (n = 93) | Humboldt (n = 62) | Napa (n = 36) | |
| Gender, No. (%)a | ||||
| Men | 129 (67.5) | 53 (57.0) | 47 (75.8) | 29 (80.6) |
| Age, median (IQR) | 52 (41, 58) | 52 (41, 58) | 54 (47, 59) | 46 (37, 53.5) |
| Race/ethnicity, No. (%) | ||||
| Non-Hispanic white | 80 (41.9) | 24 (25.8) | 47 (75.8) | 9 (25.0) |
| Non-Hispanic black | 49 (25.7) | 43 (46.2) | 5 (8.06) | 1 (2.78) |
| Hispanic | 51 (26.7) | 22 (23.7) | 6 (9.68) | 23 (63.9) |
| Other | 9 (4.71) | 4 (4.30) | 4 (6.45) | 1 (2.78) |
| Unknown | 2 (1.05) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) | 2 (5.56) |
| Sexual orientation, No. (%) | ||||
| Heterosexual | 106 (55.5) | 63 (67.7) | 29 (46.8) | 14 (38.9) |
| Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual | 77 (40.3) | 27 (29.0) | 31 (50.0) | 19 (52.8) |
| Unknown/Declined to state | 8 (4.19) | 3 (3.23) | 2 (3.23) | 3 (8.33) |
| Primary language: English | 169 (88.5) | 88 (94.6) | 59 (95.2) | 22 (61.1) |
| Education, No. (%) | ||||
| Less than high school GED | 43 (22.5) | 31 (33.3) | 12 (19.4) | 0 (0.00) |
| High school GED or higher | 94 (49.2) | 49 (52.7) | 44 (71.0) | 1 (2.78) |
| Unknown | 51 (26.7) | 10 (10.8) | 6 (9.68) | 36 (97.2) |
| Housing, No. (%) | ||||
| Stable housing | 133 (69.6) | 63 (67.7) | 48 (77.4) | 22 (61.1) |
| Temporary housing | 38 (19.9) | 23 (24.7) | 4 (6.5) | 11 (30.6) |
| Unstable housing | 17 (8.90) | 5 (5.38) | 9 (14.5) | 3 (8.33) |
| Unknown | 3 (1.57) | 2 (2.15) | 1 (1.61) | 0 (0.00) |
| Years on ART therapy: median (IQR)d | 9.48 (4.95, 12.9) | 8.07 (5.30, 11.8) | 9.80 (2.36, 13.7) | 9.75 (5.79, 14.7) |
| Unknown, No. (%) | 55 (28.8) | 35 (37.6) | 16 (25.8) | 4 (11.1) |
| HIV viral load status, No. (%)b | ||||
| Virally suppressed (VL < 200)d | 75 (39.3) | 30 (32.3) | 25 (40.3) | 20 (55.6) |
| Undetectable viral load (VL < 40) | 65 (34.0) | 24 (25.8) | 24 (38.7) | 17 (47.2) |
| Unknown | 98 (51.3) | 55 (59.1) | 30 (48.4) | 13 (36.1) |
| CD4 count, No. (%)c | ||||
| CD4 ≥ 500 | 44 (23.0) | 14 (15.1) | 18 (29.0) | 12 (33.3) |
| CD4 count, mean (SD) | 562 (360) | 475 (365) | 639 (374) | 574 (318) |
| Unknown | 106 (55.5) | 62 (66.7) | 30 (48.4) | 14 (38.9) |
aCounty percentages are relative to the county total
bViral load is measured in copies/mL
cCD4 count is measured in cells/mm3
dIQR = interquartile range, VL = viral load
Food security, viral load, and CD4 count at baseline and 12 months after enrollment
| Health outcome | No. of clients with paired data | Baselinea | 12 monthsb | p-valuec,d |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Food insecure, No. (%) | 87 | 0 (0%) | 54 (62.1%) | < |
| Viral suppression (VL < 200), No. (%) | 45 | 40 (88.9%) | 43 (95.6%) | 0.375 |
| Undetectable viral load (VL < 40), No. (%) | 45 | 34 (75.6%) | 38 (84.4%) | 0.388 |
| CD4 ≥ 500, No. (%) | 33 | 16 (48.5%) | 22 (66.7%) |
aBaseline indicates outcome closest to enrollment within the 6-month window prior to enrollment
b12 months indicates outcome recorded closest to 12 months, between 6 to 12 months of enrollment
cp-values calculated using McNemar’s test
dItalicized p-values are statistically significant at p < 0.05
Viral load and CD4 count trends prior to and after FAPP enrollment
| Pre-program trend | Program trend | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health outcome | aOR | 95% CI | p-value | aOR | 95% CI | p-valuec |
| Viral suppression (VL < 200) | 1.13 | 0.810, 1.58 | 0.472 | 1.91 | 1.26, 2.91 | |
| Undetectable viral load (VL < 40) | 1.17 | 0.910, 1.50 | 0.224 | 1.14 | 0.824, 1.57 | 0.435 |
aOR adjusted odds ratio, CI confidence interval
aSample sizes, viral load: VL pre-program trend (249 person-time observations, 127 unique ID’s); VL program trend (255 person-time observations, 140 unique ID’s)
bSample sizes, CD4: CD4 pre-program trend (226 person-time observations, 117 unique ID’s); CD4 program trend (234 person-time observations, 137 unique ID’s)
cItalicized p-values are statistically significant at p < 0.05