Go Back Research Article June, 2016

HIV Testing, Care Referral, and Linkage to Care Intervals Affect Time to Engagement in Care for Newly Diagnosed HIV-Infected Adolescents in 15 Adolescent Medicine Clinics in the United States

Abstract

Objective: To examine how the time from HIV testing to care referral and from referral to care linkage influenced time to care engagement for newly diagnosed HIV-infected adolescents. Methods: We evaluated the Care Initiative, a care linkage and engagement program for HIV-infected adolescents in 15 US clinics. We analyzed client-level factors, provider type, and intervals from HIV testing to care referral and from referral to care linkage as predictors of care engagement. Engagement was defined as a second HIV-related medical visit within 16 weeks of initial HIV-related medical visit (linkage). Results: At 32 months, 2143 youth had been referred. Of these, 866 were linked to care through the Care Initiative within 42 days and thus eligible for study inclusion. Of the linked youth, 90.8% were ultimately engaged in care. Time from HIV testing to referral (eg, ≤7 days versus >365 days) was associated with engagement [adjusted odds ratio = 2.91; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.43 to 5.94] and shorter time to engagement (adjusted hazard ratio = 1.41; 95% CI: 1.11 to 1.79). Individuals with shorter care referral to linkage intervals (eg, ≤7 days versus 22–42 days) engaged in care faster (adjusted hazard ratio = 2.90; 95% CI: 2.34 to 3.60) and more successfully (adjusted odds ratio = 2.01; 95% CI: 1.04 to 3.89). Conclusions: These data address a critical piece of the care continuum and can offer suggestions of where and with whom to intervene to best achieve the care engagement goals outlined in the US National HIV/AIDS Strategy. These results may also inform programs and policies that set concrete milestones and strategies for optimal care linkage timing for newly diagnosed adolescents.

Keywords

hiv adolescent time to linkage care engagement care linkage hiv testing hiv care referral linkage to care hiv-infected adolescents adolescent medicine clinics hiv care continuum time to care engagement hiv treatment initiation youth hiv care hiv referral intervals care linkage timing hiv care engagement strategies national hiv/aids strategy hiv prevention programs adolescent hiv treatment hiv medical visits hiv retention in care public health interventions hiv policy and programs care initiative for youth hiv diagnosis to treatment healthcare access for hiv youth-friendly hiv services rapid hiv care referral hiv care milestones health disparities in hiv care care referral
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Volume 72
Issue 2
Pages 222-229
ISSN 1077-9450
Impact Metrics