Retention in care and antiretroviral therapy adherence among Medicaid beneficiaries with HIV, 2001-2015.
Jacqueline E RudolphKeri L CalkinsXueer ZhangYiyi ZhouXiaoqiang XuEryka L WentzCorinne E JoshuBryan LauPublished in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2024)
Disparities in HIV care by socioeconomic status, place of residence, and race/ethnicity prevent progress toward epidemic control. No study has comprehensively characterized the HIV care cascade among people with HIV enrolled in Medicaid - an insurance source for low-income individuals in the US. We analyzed data from 246,127 people with HIV enrolled in Medicaid 2001-2015, aged 18-64, living in 14 US states. We estimated monthly prevalence of four steps of the care cascade: retained in care/adherent to ART; retained/not adherent; not retained/adherent; not retained/not adherent. Beneficiaries were retained in care if they had an outpatient care encounter every six months. Adherence was based on medication possession ratio. We estimated prevalence using a non-parametric multi-state approach, accounting for death as a competing event and for Medicaid disenrollment using inverse probability of censoring weights. Across 2001-2015, the proportion of beneficiaries with HIV who were retained/ART adherent increased, overall and in all subgroups. By 2015, approximately half of beneficiaries were retained in care, and 42% of beneficiaries were ART adherent. We saw meaningful differences by race/ethnicity and region. Our work highlights an important disparity in the HIV care cascade by insurance status during this time period.
Keyphrases
- antiretroviral therapy
- affordable care act
- hiv infected
- hiv positive
- healthcare
- human immunodeficiency virus
- health insurance
- palliative care
- hiv aids
- hiv infected patients
- quality improvement
- hiv testing
- hepatitis c virus
- men who have sex with men
- emergency department
- machine learning
- big data
- metabolic syndrome
- electronic health record
- insulin resistance