Go Back Research Article November, 2019

Improving Timely Linkage to Care among Newly Diagnosed HIV-Infected Youth: Results of SMILE

Abstract

Delayed linkage to care deprives youth living with HIV of the benefits of HIV treatment and risks increased HIV transmission. Developing and testing linkage-to-care models that are capable of simultaneously addressing structural and individual obstacles are necessary to attain national goals for timely linkage of newly diagnosed youth to care. We assessed an integrated, multi-pronged strategy for improving youth’s timely linkage to care carried out in eight adolescent medicine clinical trials units (AMTUs) in the USA. In phase I, the intervention strategy paired intensive medical case management with formalized relationships to local health departments, including granting of public health authority (PHA) to four of the AMTUs. In phase II, local coalitions run by the AMTUs to address structural changes to meet youth’s HIV prevention and HIV testing needs began to advocate for local structural changes to improve timely access to care. Results of an ARIMA model demonstrated sustained decline in the average number of days to link to care over a 6-year period (ARIMA (1,2,1) AIC = 245.74, BIC = 248.70, p < .01)). By the end of the study, approximately 90% of youth linked to care had an initial medical visit in 42 or fewer days post-diagnosis. PHA improved the timeliness of linkage to care (b = − 69.56, p < .05). A piecewise regression suggested the addition of structural change initiatives during phase II made a statistically significant contribution to reducing time to linkage over and above achievements attained via case management alone (F (3,19) = 5.48, p < .01; Adj. R2 = .3794). Multi-level linkage-to-care interventions show promise for improving youth’s timely access to HIV medical care.

Keywords

youth adolescence hiv/aids linkageto-care structural change hiv linkage to care youth hiv treatment adolescents living with hiv timely hiv care access hiv case management public health authority (pha) structural barriers to hiv care hiv prevention strategies adolescent medicine clinical trials hiv testing and diagnosis youth health disparities arima model in healthcare medical case management structural change interventions hiv care continuum community-based hiv initiatives public health and hiv healthcare access for youth hiv policy and structural interventions multi-level hiv interventions youth-friendly healthcare services hiv epidemiology adolescent health policy timely medical interventions hiv care retention public health advocacy hiv/aids research healthcare equity hiv pha
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Volume 96
Issue 6
Pages 845–855
ISSN 1468-2869
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