Abstract
Engaging people living with HIV who report substance use (PLWH-SU) in care is essential to HIV medical management and prevention of new HIV infections. Factors associated with poor engagement in HIV care include a combination of syndemic psychosocial factors, mental and physical comorbidities, and structural barriers to healthcare utilization. Patient navigation (PN) is designed to reduce barriers to care, but its effectiveness among PLWH-SU remains unclear. We analyzed data from NIDA Clinical Trials Network’s CTN-0049, a three-arm randomized controlled trial testing the effect of a 6-month PN with and without contingency management (CM), on engagement in HIV care and viral suppression among PLWH-SU (n = 801). Latent profile analysis was used to identify subgroups of individuals’ experiences to 23 barriers to care. The effects of PN on engagement in care and viral suppression were compared across latent profiles. Three latent profiles of barriers to care were identified. The results revealed that PN interventions are likely to be most effective for PLWH-SU with fewer, less severe healthcare barriers. Special attention should be given to individuals with a history of abuse, intimate partner violence, and discrimination, as they may be less likely to benefit from PN alone and require additional interventions.
Funder
National Institutes on Drug Abuse
Miami CFAR
Emory Center for AIDS Research
Center for HIV and Research in Mental Health
Reference84 articles.
1. CDC (2019, November 12). Monitoring Selected National HIV Prevention and Care Objectives by Using HIV Surveillance Data—United States and 6 Dependent Areas, Available online: https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/79991.
2. Predictors of Adult Retention in HIV Care: A Systematic Review;Bulsara;AIDS Behav.,2018
3. Influence of noninjecting and injecting drug use on mortality, retention in the cohort, and antiretroviral therapy, in participants in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study;Weber;HIV Med.,2015
4. Living with HIV but without medical care: Barriers to engagement;Tobias;AIDS Patient Care STDs,2007
5. McMahon, J.H., Moore, R., Eu, B., Tee, B.-K., Chen, M., El-Hayek, C., Street, A., Woolley, I.J., Buggie, A., and Collins, D. (2015). Clinic Network Collaboration and Patient Tracing to Maximize Retention in HIV Care. PLoS ONE, 10.
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献