Erschienen in:
24.06.2016 | Brief Report
Come as You Are: Improving Care Engagement and Viral Load Suppression Among HIV Care Coordination Clients with Lower Mental Health Functioning, Unstable Housing, and Hard Drug Use
verfasst von:
Mary K. Irvine, Stephanie A. Chamberlin, Rebekkah S. Robbins, Sarah G. Kulkarni, McKaylee M. Robertson, Denis Nash
Erschienen in:
AIDS and Behavior
|
Ausgabe 6/2017
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Abstract
Lower mental health functioning, unstable housing, and drug use can complicate HIV clinical management. Merging programmatic and surveillance data, we examined characteristics and outcomes for HIV Care Coordination clients enrolled between December 2009 and March 2013. For clients diagnosed over 12 months before enrollment, we calculated post- versus pre-enrollment relative risks for short-term (12-month) care engagement and viral suppression. Both outcomes significantly improved in all subgroups, including those with lower mental health functioning, unstable housing, or hard drug use. Analyses further stratified within barrier-affected groups showed a tendency toward greater improvement when that barrier was reduced during the follow-up year.