» Articles » PMID: 17570298

Retaining Women in HIV Medical Care

Overview
Date 2007 Jun 16
PMID 17570298
Citations 28
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This study evaluated the effectiveness of an ancillary service assignment protocol to improve women's retention in HIV medical care. HIV-positive women with acknowledged difficulty in keeping regularly scheduled HIV clinic appointments were assigned to an intervention based on presenting characteristics: 6 months transportation plus nursing case management followed by 6 months transportation only for women currently using heroin and/or showing mental illness problems or transportation only for 12 months. Self-report and HIV clinic data provided measures of kept and missed appointments. Results were as hypothesized. The Transportation Only sample maintained number of kept appointments and significantly decreased number of missed appointments. The Transportation Plus sample significantly increased number of appointments kept and significantly decreased number of missed appointments. When intensive intervention was reduced to transportation only, charted HIV medical appointments significantly decreased. Positive influence on retention in HIV medical care requires level of intervention to be determined by current relevant client characteristics.

Citing Articles

Does travel time matter?: predictors of transportation vulnerability and access to HIV care among people living with HIV in South Carolina.

Harrison S, Hung P, Green K, Miller S, Paton M, Ahuja D BMC Public Health. 2025; 25(1):926.

PMID: 40057737 PMC: 11889868. DOI: 10.1186/s12889-025-22090-y.


A Qualitative Study of Transportation-Related Barriers to HIV Care in South Carolina.

Miller S, Paton M, Ahuja D, Weissman S, Evans T, Gutner C South Med J. 2024; 117(10):617-622.

PMID: 39366689 PMC: 11703417. DOI: 10.14423/SMJ.0000000000001742.


One size does not fit all: Preferences for HIV care delivery among out-of-care people living with HIV in the Southeastern United States.

Jones M, Dyer K, Nedell E, Fletcher M, Ackerley C, Hussen S PLoS One. 2023; 18(1):e0276852.

PMID: 36649350 PMC: 9844861. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0276852.


Effect of interventions for non-emergent medical transportation: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Shekelle P, Begashaw M, Miake-Lye I, Booth M, Myers B, Renda A BMC Public Health. 2022; 22(1):799.

PMID: 35449011 PMC: 9026972. DOI: 10.1186/s12889-022-13149-1.


Toward An Enhanced Understanding of HIV Patient Navigation as a Health Care Intervention: An Analysis of Navigation in Practice.

Koenig L, Higa D, Leighton C, Roland K, DeLuca J, Mizuno Y AIDS Behav. 2021; 25(12):4044-4054.

PMID: 33772697 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-021-03244-6.