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Paper Title

Understanding Care Linkage and Engagement Across 15 Adolescent Clinics: Provider Perspectives and Implications for Newly HIV-Infected Youth

Keywords

  • adolescent health
  • hiv/aids
  • linkage to care
  • engagement in care
  • hiv-infected youth
  • care retention
  • youth agency
  • health system
  • hiv testing
  • delayed care entry
  • dropout prevention
  • provider perspectives
  • clinic visits
  • care continuum
  • health outcomes
  • qualitative research
  • medical staff involvement
  • public health strategy
  • national hiv/aids strategy
  • adolescent medicine
  • hiv care interventions
  • youth responsibility
  • health disparities
  • structural barriers
  • care integration
  • hiv prevention

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 29 | Issue : 2 | Page No : 93–104

Published On

May, 2017

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Abstract

The National HIV/AIDS Strategy emphasizes rapid care linkage and engagement for HIV-infected individuals, though many adolescents are never tested, delay entering care, and frequently drop out. We conducted 183 staff interviews at 15 adolescent medicine clinics (baseline, n = 64; Year 1, n = 60; Year 2, = 59). We used a constant comparative thematic method to examine how providers approached and discussed care linkage/engagement. Qualitative analyses revealed differences in providers' conceptualizations of linkage and engagement. Providers saw linkage as mechanistic and health system driven. It was defined by number of clinic visits and involved relatively little youth agency. In contrast, providers defined engagement by youths' responsibility and participation in their own care. Linkage and engagement are related but distinct aspects of care that require different resources and levels of staff involvement. Integrating an understanding of these differences into future interventions will allow clinic staff to help youth improve long-term health outcomes.

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