Abstract

BackgroundPersons living with HIV (PLWH) and substance use/misuse experience significant barriers to engagement in HIV care at every step of the HIV care continuum including: (1) HIV testing and diagnosis (2) linkage to clinical care (3) retention in care pre-antiretroviral therapy (ART) (4) ART initiation and adherence (5) viral suppression. We qualitatively explored the facilitators of and barriers to participation in the HIV care continuum among PLWH with substance use/misuse.MethodsWe performed semi-structured in-depth interviews with 34 PLWH in care with recent substance use. The transcripts were analyzed in an iterative process using an editing style analysis. Interviews were conducted until thematic saturation was achieved.ResultsParticipants attributed an escalation in drug use at the time of diagnosis to denial of their disease and the belief that their death was inevitable and cited this as a barrier to treatment entry. In contrast, participants reported that experiencing adverse physical effects of uncontrolled HIV infection motivated them to enroll in care. Reported barriers to retention and adherence to care included forgetting medications and appointments because of drug use, prioritizing drug use over HIV treatment and side effects associated with medications. Participants described that progression of illness, development of a medication taking ritual and a positive provider-patient relationship all facilitated engagement and reengagement in care.ConclusionsPLWH with substance use engaged in care describe barriers to and facilitators of optimal engagement related to and distinct from substance use. Greater understanding of the biologic, psychological and social factors that promote and impair engagement in care can inform interventions and reduce the increased morbidity and mortality experienced by PLWH with substance use.

Highlights

  • Persons living with HIV (PLWH) and substance use/misuse experience significant barriers to engagement in HIV care at every step of the HIV care continuum including: (1) HIV testing and diagnosis (2) linkage to clinical care (3) retention in care pre-antiretroviral therapy (ART) (4) ART initiation and adherence (5) viral suppression

  • In an analysis of 790 injection drug users (IDUs) in the the AIDS linked to the intravenous experience (ALIVE) study, a longitudinal study of IDUs in Baltimore, 53.9 % of IDUs achieved successful viral suppression, significantly lower than the nationally representative estimates of 72–77 % among the general population of individuals receiving HIV care [4]

  • The majority of individuals in this study had a history of polysubstance abuse (n = 25, 73.5 %) as reported on the NIDA ASSIST survey; the median NIDA ASSIST score of this sample was 28.5, [16, 17]

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Summary

Introduction

Persons living with HIV (PLWH) and substance use/misuse experience significant barriers to engagement in HIV care at every step of the HIV care continuum including: (1) HIV testing and diagnosis (2) linkage to clinical care (3) retention in care pre-antiretroviral therapy (ART) (4) ART initiation and adherence (5) viral suppression. In the United States, individuals with substance use tend to be diagnosed with HIV and linked to care later in their disease course than nondrug users [2]. Both active and intermittent drug use is associated with a lower probability of initiating ART [3, 4]. Kuchinad et al BMC Res Notes (2016) 9:229 retained in care over a median of 8.7 years of follow up [4] This lack of engagement in care is reflected in low rates of viral suppression [4, 8, 9]. A study of 1851 IDUs, found that active intermittent (OR 2.2, 95 % CI 1.4–2.9) and persistent drug users (OR 1.9 CI 1.2–2.8) had a significantly higher risk of opportunistic infection as compared to non drug users [8]

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