Friday, July 31, 2015

Using HIV Surveillance Registry Data to Re-Link Persons to Care: The RSVP Project in San Francisco

Below:  Disposition for 282 Investigated Cases, the RSVP Project, San Francisco, 2012–2013 (n = 282)




Results
Among 434 eligible persons, 282 were prioritized for investigation, of whom 75 (27%) were interviewed, 79 (28%) could not be located, and 48 (17%) were located out of the area. Among the interviewed, 54 (72%) persons accepted referral to LINCS. Upon match-back to eHARS data, 324 (75%) in total were confirmed as eligible, including 221 (78%) of the investigated; most had new labs.

Conclusions
Among the investigated persons presumed out-of-care, we interviewed and offered LINCS referral to about one-quarter, demonstrating the feasibility but limited yield of our project. Matching to updated surveillance data revealed that a substantial minority did not disengage from care and that most re-engaged in HIV care. Verifying persons’ HIV care status with medical providers and improving timeliness of transfer and cross-jurisdictional sharing of HIV laboratory data may aid future efforts.


Via:  http://ht.ly/QmdfP  HT @CDCgov 

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