Division of HIV, ID and Global Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
Institute of Global Health Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2020 Dec 1;85(4):444-449. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000002476.
Homelessness and unstable housing (HUH) negatively impact care outcomes for people living with HIV (PLWH). To inform the design of a clinic program for PLWH experiencing HUH, we quantified patient preferences and trade-offs across multiple HIV-service domains using a discrete choice experiment (DCE).
We sequentially sampled PLWH experiencing HUH presenting at an urban HIV clinic with ≥1 missed primary care visit and viremia in the last year to conduct a DCE. Participants chose between 2 hypothetical clinics varying across 5 service attributes: care team "get to know me as a person" versus not; receiving $10, $15, or $20 gift cards for clinic visits; drop-in versus scheduled visits; direct phone communication to care team versus front-desk staff; and staying 2 versus 20 blocks from the clinic. We estimated attribute relative utility (ie, preference) using mixed-effects logistic regression and calculated the monetary trade-off of preferred options.
Among 65 individuals interviewed, 61% were >40 years old, 45% White, 77% men, 25% heterosexual, 56% lived outdoors/emergency housing, and 44% in temporary housing. Strongest preferences were for patient-centered care team [β = 3.80; 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.57 to 5.02] and drop-in clinic appointments (β = 1.33; 95% CI: 0.85 to 1.80), with a willingness to trade $32.79 (95% CI: 14.75 to 50.81) and $11.45 (95% CI: 2.95 to 19.95) in gift cards/visit, respectively.
In this DCE, PLWH experiencing HUH were willing to trade significant financial gain to have a personal relationship with and drop-in access to their care team rather than more resource-intensive services. These findings informed Ward 86's "POP-UP" program for PLWH-HUH and can inform "ending the HIV epidemic" efforts.
无家可归和住房不稳定(HUH)会对感染艾滋病毒的患者(PLWH)的护理结果产生负面影响。为了为经历 HUH 的 PLWH 设计诊所计划提供信息,我们使用离散选择实验(DCE)量化了多个 HIV 服务领域的患者偏好和权衡。
我们连续抽取了在城市 HIV 诊所就诊的经历 HUH 的 PLWH,这些患者至少错过了一次初级保健就诊,并且在过去一年中病毒载量升高。参与者在两个假设的诊所之间进行选择,这两个诊所在 5 个服务属性上有所不同:医护团队“了解我作为一个人”与不了解;就诊时获得 10、15 或 20 美元的礼品卡;随到随诊与预约就诊;直接与医护团队沟通与与前台工作人员沟通;以及距离诊所 2 或 20 个街区。我们使用混合效应逻辑回归估计了属性的相对效用(即偏好),并计算了首选选项的货币权衡。
在接受采访的 65 个人中,61%的人年龄超过 40 岁,45%是白人,77%是男性,25%是异性恋,56%居住在户外/紧急住房中,44%居住在临时住房中。最强的偏好是患者为中心的医护团队[β=3.80;95%置信区间(CI):2.57 至 5.02]和随到随诊的就诊安排(β=1.33;95% CI:0.85 至 1.80),愿意用 32.79 美元(95% CI:14.75 至 50.81 美元)和 11.45 美元(95% CI:2.95 至 19.95 美元)的礼品卡/就诊来换取。
在这项 DCE 中,经历 HUH 的 PLWH 愿意用大量的财务收益来换取与他们的医护团队建立个人关系和随到随诊的机会,而不是获得更具资源密集性的服务。这些发现为 PLWH-HUH 的“Ward 86 的“POP-UP”计划提供了信息,并可以为“结束艾滋病毒流行”的努力提供信息。