Question 2: What are the number and characteristics of persons who know they are HIV-positive but who are not receiving primary medical care?
Efforts to measure unmet need among persons with HIV infection are
under way in Louisiana. The Louisiana Office of Public Health HIV/AIDS
Program has developed several strategies for identifying persons who
know their status but who are not receiving primary medical care. The
first project focuses on enumerating the persons who are reported as HIV
infected, currently living in Louisiana, and receiving routine medical
care versus those who are not receiving care. The second project is a
statewide needs assessment survey, for which the most recent data were
collected in 2000.
Highlights
- Of the persons living with HIV who completed the 2000 Statewide Needs
Assessment and reported primary care as a need, 19% said that they needed
more primary care than was available. An additional 5% reported that their
need for primary medical care was not being met at all.
- Of the respondents who reported having taken protease inhibitors during
the past 6 months (n=924), most said that they took them “always” as
prescribed (60%) or “most of the time” as prescribed (31%). Of the
respondents who were not taking combination therapy (n=233), most reported
that the medications had not been prescribed (52%) or that they had not been
able to tolerate the side effects (21%).
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Measuring Unmet Need by Using Laboratory Data
Louisiana’s Sanitary Code requires that laboratories report all test
results indicative of HIV infection in persons residing in Louisiana
(i.e., tests ordered by facilities operating in Louisiana). Once the
test results have been reported to the HIV/AIDS Surveillance Program,
the results can be linked to records in the HIV/AIDS case registry,
which defines the population of persons living with HIV in Louisiana.
Consequently, for a specified time, each HIV-infected person can be
characterized as “in care” or “not in care” by the presence or the
absence of a laboratory test result (e.g., CD4 cell count or measurement
of viral load) during that period. This method, however, assumes that
laboratory reporting is complete. Reporting is complete only if all
laboratories that perform tests for HIV care facilities in Louisiana
report their results to the HIV/AIDS Surveillance Program; completeness
of reporting is currently being evaluated (described in the following).
A preliminary analysis of the laboratory information is being
conducted to determine what proportion of persons living with HIV during
2001 sought care for HIV infection from the health care system. This
analysis will detect additional issues or biases that may affect the
analysis of unmet need. Later analyses will identify factors associated
with accessing care and will investigate issues such as patterns of care
utilization (e.g., continuity of care in the same facility, changing
facilities of care) and remaining in care. An additional analysis will
generate estimates of unmet need based upon a probability method that is
being developed for HRSA by the University of California, San Francisco.
The estimates of unmet need generated by each method will be compared to
describe their differences, to assess the validity of the assumptions
upon which the methods are based, and to examine their potential biases.
A comprehensive evaluation of the completeness of laboratory-based
reporting is being conducted. Surveillance staff used HARS and CAREWare
to generate a master list of medical facilities and health care
providers in Louisiana that have cared for HIV-infected persons in the
past. Each provider has been contacted by a surveillance epidemiologist
to ascertain which labs the facility uses to perform HIV-related tests,
as well as to determine the staff's knowledge of HIV reporting laws in
Louisiana and the facility’s history of reporting HIV/AIDS cases. The
completed questionnaires will be analyzed to identify any laboratories
not yet reporting in order to enlist them for future reporting and to
describe potential biases in the estimates of unmet need.
Ryan White Statewide Needs Assessment Survey
A statewide needs assessment survey is conducted statewide in
Louisiana every 2 years. The 2000–2001 survey was completed by more than
1,400 persons; this number represented more than 10% of the persons
reported as living with HIV/AIDS in Louisiana. Information from the
2000–2001 survey provided insight into whether persons were seeking
medical care, how often, and where. Additional information was collected
on persons’ available income and health insurance to pay for these
services, extent of knowledge of their medical condition, extent of
knowledge of available services and treatments, and strengths and
barriers encountered when they attempted to obtain medical care. Another
survey will be conducted during 2002: data on persons who indicate that
they have received neither medical care nor a laboratory test (CD4 cell
count or measurement of viral load) in more than 6 months will undergo
additional in-depth analysis. The information gathered through the 2002
survey will provide a better understanding of persons who are not
receiving care, as well as some of the potential barriers to care.
Service Needs/Availability
In the 2000-2001 Statewide Needs Assessment, respondents were asked
to report their need for 26 different services during the past 6 months.
Respondents indicated whether they needed the service and received it,
received the service but needed more than was available, needed the
service but could not get it, or did not need the service. Primary
medical care was rated the most needed service: 91% of the respondents
reported a need for this type of care.
Although 95% of these persons received some primary medical care
during the past 6 months, nearly one fifth of patients (19%) said that
they needed more than was available. An additional 5% reported that
their need for primary medical care had not been met at all (Figure 47).
Respondents reported that the reasons they did not receive adequate care
included rescheduling difficulties, inadequate medical staffing,
difficulty in accessing acute care at their local HIV/AIDS clinic, and
transportation problems. Of the persons who received primary medical
care, most (90%) reported they obtained primary care services at a
public medical center (Figure 48).
Figure 47: Need for Primary Medical Care Services (n=1,366)
Ryan White Needs Assessment, Louisiana, 2000-2001

Figure 48: Receipt of Primary Care by HIV-Infected Persons
(n=1,151), by Type of Facility
Ryan White Needs Assessment, Louisiana, 2000-2001

Note: Percentages do not sum to 100% because respondents were asked to
report all primary care providers.
In addition to primary medical care, the following services were
rated as the most needed by respondents: medications (78%), dental care
(61%), case management (56%), and food bank or vouchers (53%). Some of
these service needs were not met as well as others. Of all services, the
highest level of unmet need was for dental services (17%).
Antiretroviral Therapy (ART)
Of the respondents, 73% reported
that they had received a
prescription for combination
therapy medications during the
past 6 months (Figure 49). Of
those who reported taking
protease inhibitors (n = 924),
most indicated that they took the
medications “always” as
prescribed (60%) or “most of the
time” as prescribed (31%) (Figure
50).
Figure 49: Combination Therapy in Past 6 Months (n=1,348 patients)
Ryan White Needs Assessment, Louisiana, 2000-2001

Figure 50: Adherence to Directions for Combination Therapy (n=924
patients)
Ryan White Needs Assessment, Louisiana, 2000-2001

Of the respondents who were not
taking combination therapy (n =
233), most reported that the
medications had not been prescribed (52%) or that they had not been able
to tolerate the
side effects (21%). Only 1% throughout the state reported that they had
not been able to
fill prescriptions (either combination therapy or other therapy). Most
respondents (69%)
said they got medications from an HIV/AIDS clinic in a public medical
center.
Go to Appendix A |