Identifying the spatial patterning characteristics of HIV positive clients not linked to care using a geographic information system

Author:

Rombosia KevinORCID,Rangara Nelly,Oele Elizabeth,Kirui Nancy,Olaka DouglasORCID,Ondura Evans,Mitto Bernard

Abstract

Background: Linkage to care is a crucial early step in successful HIV treatment. This study sought to identify the spatial patterning characteristics of HIV positive clients that are not linked to care in the Kisumu West HIV program using a geographic information system. Methods: The geocodes of HIV positive, non-linked clients’ residences were exported to ArcGIS software. The spatial patterning characteristics of HIV clients that are testing positive and not linked to care was described using Global Moran’s I statistic, which is a measure of spatial autocorrelation. Results: A total of 14,077 clients were tested for HIV. Of clients testing positive for HIV, 10% (n=34) were not yet linked to care two weeks after the diagnosis of HIV. Of the HIV positive non-linked clients, most (65%; n= 32) had spatially identifiable data about where they resided. Regarding the spatial patterning characteristics of the clients who tested HIV positive but were not linked to care and with spatially identifiable residence information, the Global Moran I statistic for autocorrelation was 0.435 (z score 1.383, p- value 0.167). Conclusion: By using age as an attribute value, the spatial distribution of clients testing HIV positive and not being linked to care is random. Geographical information systems can be used to identify the spatial patterning characteristics of HIV positive clients that are not linked to care. A key requirement to achieving this would require the collection of precise and accurate spatially identifiable locator information but without compromising patient confidentiality.

Funder

United States Agency for International Development

Publisher

F1000 Research Ltd

Subject

General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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