Goswami Neela D, Schmitz Michelle M, Sanchez Travis, Dasgupta Sharoda, Sullivan Patrick, Cooper Hannah, Rane Deepali, Kelly Jane, Del Rio Carlos, Waller Lance A
*Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; †Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA; ‡Hubert Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; §Department of Behavioral Sciences and Health Education, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; ‖Georgia Department of Public Health, Atlanta, GA; and ¶Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2016 May 1;72(1):65-72. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000000914.
Engagement in care is central to reducing mortality for HIV-infected persons and achieving the White House National AIDS Strategy of 80% viral suppression in the US by 2020. Where an HIV-infected person lives impacts his or her ability to achieve viral suppression. Reliable transportation access for healthcare may be a key determinant of this place-suppression relationship.
ZIP code tabulation areas (ZCTAs) were the units of analysis. We used geospatial and ecologic analyses to examine spatial distributions of neighborhood-level variables (eg, transportation accessibility) and associations with: (1) community linkage to care, and (2) community viral suppression. Among Atlanta ZCTAs with data for newly diagnosed HIV cases (2006-2010), we used Moran I to evaluate spatial clustering and linear regression models to evaluate associations between neighborhood variables and outcomes.
In 100 ZCTAs with 8413 newly diagnosed HIV-positive residents, a median of 60 HIV cases were diagnosed per ZCTA during the 5-year period. We found significant clustering of ZCTAs with low linkage to care and viral suppression (Moran I = 0.218, P < 0.05). In high-poverty ZCTAs, a 10% point increase in ZCTA-level household vehicle ownership was associated with a 4% point increase in linkage to care (P = 0.02, R = 0.16). In low-poverty ZCTAs, a 10% point increase in ZCTA-level household vehicle ownership was associated with a 30% point increase in ZCTA-level viral suppression (P = 0.01, R = 0.08).
Correlations between transportation variables and community-level care linkage and viral suppression vary by area poverty level and provide opportunities for interventions beyond individual-level factors.
参与治疗对于降低艾滋病毒感染者的死亡率以及实现白宫国家艾滋病战略(到2020年在美国将80%的感染者病毒抑制)至关重要。艾滋病毒感染者的居住地点会影响其实现病毒抑制的能力。获得可靠的医疗交通可能是这种地点与病毒抑制关系的关键决定因素。
邮政编码分区(ZCTA)为分析单位。我们使用地理空间和生态分析来检查社区层面变量(如交通可达性)的空间分布以及与以下方面的关联:(1)社区与治疗的联系,以及(2)社区病毒抑制情况。在有新诊断艾滋病毒病例数据(2006 - 2010年)的亚特兰大ZCTA中,我们使用莫兰指数I来评估空间聚类,并使用线性回归模型来评估社区变量与结果之间的关联。
在100个ZCTA中有8413名新诊断的艾滋病毒阳性居民,在这5年期间每个ZCTA诊断出的艾滋病毒病例中位数为60例。我们发现与治疗联系少和病毒抑制率低的ZCTA存在显著聚类(莫兰指数I = 0.218,P < 0.05)。在高贫困ZCTA中,ZCTA层面家庭车辆拥有率每增加10个百分点,与治疗联系增加4个百分点相关(P = 0.02,R = 0.16)。在低贫困ZCTA中,ZCTA层面家庭车辆拥有率每增加10个百分点,与ZCTA层面病毒抑制率增加30个百分点相关(P = 0.01,R = 0.08)。
交通变量与社区层面治疗联系和病毒抑制之间的相关性因地区贫困水平而异,并为超越个体层面因素的干预提供了机会。