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Observational Study
. 2017 Oct 1;76(2):141-148.
doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000001474.

Observational Study of the Effect of Patient Outreach on Return to Care: The Earlier the Better

Affiliations
Observational Study

Observational Study of the Effect of Patient Outreach on Return to Care: The Earlier the Better

Peter F Rebeiro et al. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. .

Abstract

Background: The burden of HIV remains heaviest in resource-limited settings, where problems of losses to care, silent transfers, gaps in care, and incomplete mortality ascertainment have been recognized.

Methods: Patients in care at Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare (AMPATH) clinics from 2001-2011 were included in this retrospective observational study. Patients missing an appointment were traced by trained staff; those found alive were counseled to return to care (RTC). Relative hazards of RTC were estimated among those having a true gap: missing a clinic appointment and confirmed as neither dead nor receiving care elsewhere. Sample-based multiple imputation accounted for missing vital status.

Results: Among 34,522 patients lost to clinic, 15,331 (44.4%) had a true gap per outreach, 2754 (8.0%) were deceased, and 837 (2.4%) had documented transfers. Of 15,600 (45.2%) remaining without active ascertainment, 8762 (56.2%) with later RTC were assumed to have a true gap. Adjusted cause-specific hazard ratios (aHRs) showed early outreach (a ≤8-day window, defined by grid-search approach) had twice the hazard for RTC vs. those without (aHR = 2.06; P < 0.001). HRs for RTC were lower the later the outreach effort after disengagement (aHR = 0.86 per unit increase in time; P < 0.001). Older age, female sex (vs. male), antiretroviral therapy use (vs. none), and HIV status disclosure (vs. none) were also associated with greater likelihood of RTC, and higher enrollment CD4 count with lower likelihood of RTC.

Conclusion: Patient outreach efforts have a positive impact on patient RTC, regardless of when undertaken, but particularly soon after the patient misses an appointment.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Time-dependent hazard ratio – HR – for return to care (ratio of successful outreach versus unsuccessful or no outreach) dependent on time of initiation of outreach relative to disengagement. The horizontal dashed line at HR=1 (reference) implies no difference attributable to outreach. HR>1 implies benefit (higher likelihood of return), while HR<1 indicates a detrimental effect of outreach.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Estimates of the cumulative probability of returning to HIV care after a true gap in care (time zero) according to whether there was a successful outreach (SOR) effort within 8 days from the date that a patient was flagged as lost to clinic (LTC), which was the beginning of the gap in care. Estimates are based on the analysis of the observed data (black solid and dashed lines) and the sensitivity analysis regarding various scenarios of the unobserved out-of-care mortality (shaded areas corresponding to a range of mortality rates while out of care).

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