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A community perspective. Background
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1. Practicing Out of the Box: The Research Challenges of Caring for HIV+ Substance Users Chinazo Cunningham, MD
Division of General Internal Medicine
Dept of Family and Social Medicine
MMC/AECOM
3. Background Montefiore Medical Center
CitiWide Harm Reduction
CBO serving HIV-infected drug users living in SRO hotels in NYC
Started as needle exchange program in 1994, now offers numerous programs
Collaboration with Montefiore since 1998
Medical care/outreach
Research/evaluation
4. CitiWide’s programs Outreach in SRO hotels
Needle exchange
Case management
Health services
Mental wellness
Support groups
Peer education Housing
Holistic health
Transportation
Clothing, showers, meals
Research/Evaluation
5. Health Services Program
6. SRO Hotel Residents
7. Research & Evaluation
8. Objectives / Model
9. Evaluation of a Medical Outreach Program Background
Marginalized HIV+ populations have less access to care, poor health outcomes
Outreach programs aim to improve access
Few programs evaluated
Objectives
To evaluated a medical outreach program that targets HIV+ SRO hotel residents in NYC
To examine patient- and program-related factors associated with keeping medical appointments
10. Methods Examined 2781 medical appt records (2003-2005)
CitiWide and Montefiore databases
Patient-related factors
sociodemographic info
Program-related factors
Appt type: same day/walk-in vs. future appt
Appt location: CitiWide vs. SRO hotel vs. CHCC
Provider making appt: medical vs. non-medical
Analysis
Chi-square, regression analysis
12. Summary Overall 29% of appts were kept
Program characteristics, NOT patient characteristics assoc with kept appts
Appts kept more often when:
At CitiWide’s drop-in center
Same day / walk-in
Made by non-medical provider
13. Implications Changed Health Services Program to provide more appts at CitiWide and same day/walk-in
Medical community must examine program-related factors (not just pt-related factors) in delivery of care to marginalized HIV+ populations
Same day access
“One stop shopping”
14. SRO Hotel Residents
15. Comparison of self report vs. medical records HIV utilization measures Background
Numerous studies examine HIV health services using self-reported outcomes
Few studies examined validity of these outcomes in marginalized populations
Crucial to understand validity of outcome measures for program evaluation
Objective: To examine agreement between self-report and medical record HIV health services utilization measures
16. Methods Cross-sectional study design
Sample
522 HIV+ individuals living in 14 SRO hotels in NYC
Data
Self report from ACASI
Medical record extraction by MD
Variables
HIV-related ambulatory care visits (0, 1, >2 visits)
HIV lab markers (CD4, VL)
HIV-related medications (ART, PCP, MAC)
Analysis
percent agreement & Kappa statistic
17. Results
18. Results
19. Conclusions Agreement between self-report and medical records was:
Poor for ambulatory visits (? = 0.09)
Poor to fair for medication use (? = 0.23-0.43)
Poor for lab tests performed (? = 0.06)
Good for CD4 count value (? = 0.71)
Most disagreement was from patient over-reporting
When examining health services utilization in marginalized populations, the use of self-reported measures as outcomes raises concerns.
20. Partnership with the community & harm reduction
21. Benefits to working with a CBO Large number of community members in one place
“Special population” not in clinical settings
Facilitate trust
Direct access to community (SRO hotels)
Attractive to funders (community-based participatory research)
22. Challenges to working with a CBO Different priorities
research vs. service
Philosophical clash
traditional medical system vs. harm reduction*
Power, money, resources
large academic medical center vs. small CBO
Supervision / oversight
Two different geographic locations
Structural issues
Computers, heating, supplies, payroll, etc
Staffing
professionals vs. para-professionals
Salary differential. Cash flow problems. Staffing—turnover rate, unique person who is sophisticated and can work in this environment.
Salary differential. Cash flow problems. Staffing—turnover rate, unique person who is sophisticated and can work in this environment.
23. Harm Reduction vs. Medical Model
24. Lesson Learned - Redefine Health Health is NOT the absence of disease
Biopsychosocial model including…
drugs
housing
support system
finances
violence
criminal justice issues…
Life priorities of HIV+ IDUs
Only 37% ranked HIV as most important
Top priorities: housing, money, safety from violence
25. Lessons Learned – Redefine Goals and Success Success is NOT just:
Undetectable viral load
Abstinence from drug use
Success also includes:
Making it to appointments
Preventative care (PCP/MAC prophylaxis, vaccinations, PAP smears, PPD)
Less, safer, more controlled drug use
Improvement in non-medical areas (housing, support system, criminal activity, etc.)
26. Lessons Learned Working with a CBO is an investment
Integration into CBO
legitimizes the research
notice problems before they become too big
“buy-in” from other CBO staff
Difficult to conduct research in setting where it is not a priority
Need face-to-face time and close oversight of research staff
Communication and transparency