Health care services for persons living with HIV have broadened from short-term, crisis-oriented, and palliative care to include preventive, acute, and long-term services because of advances in HIV treatment and earlier detection. This integrated literature review on utilization of HIV-related health care services provides information on barriers to access, disparities in treatments, and factors contributing to wasteful use of services. Early research focused on describing and quantifying use of in-hospital care. As HIV transformed into a chronic disease, research on utilization expanded into outpatient settings. Predisposing factors such as race, gender, and injection drug use, and enabling factors (i.e., insurance, social support systems, housing) were strong predictors of utilization patterns. Clinical factors, such as immune status, symptoms, and depression, as well as contextual factors (i.e., characteristics of clinicians, urban/rural residence) determined the amounts of services obtained. Additional research is recommended on the utilization of nursing and preventive services and care in rehabilitation settings, home health, and nursing homes. Understanding the patterns and predictors of resource use can facilitate health professionals' efforts in improving the health care delivery system for individuals with HIV infection.
We examined the feasibility of a Cancer Care Dialogues Model, with daily telehealth interactions between patients at home and their care coordinator, who acted as an adjunct to the oncologist. The patient and the care coordinator used a home messaging device, connected via the ordinary telephone network. Thirty-four patients with a new diagnosis of cancer and whose treatment plan included chemotherapy taken at a single clinic were enrolled and followed for six months. The home messaging device collected information daily on common symptoms associated with chemotherapy. On average, the patients had the home messaging device for 120 days (range 30-180). The mean cooperation rate was 84% (range 4-100). No variables were significantly associated with patient cooperation in the dialogues over time. The health-related quality of life (HRQL) mean score at baseline was 73.9 (SD 15.4), and the mean score at six months was 78.4 (SD 14.5). After adjusting for demographic and clinical factors, there was a 6.5-point increase in HRQL score between the baseline and end of treatment, which represented an important clinical difference. Management of nervousness/worry over time through cancer care dialogues is important in maintaining HRQL and can be assisted by remote home messaging.
Although empirical information on resource use during HIV infection is vital to improving quality of care, the issues involved in conducting research on resource use have received little attention in the medical literature. The purpose of this paper is to review the theoretical and methodological issues of conducting research on health care utilization patterns among persons with HIV/AIDS. Conceptual definitions of utilization are compared and contrasted. Three theoretical frameworks, the Andersen Behavioral Model, the Health Belief Model, and the Biopsychosocial Model are described to illustrate their applicability in future research studies. Research designs, measurement considerations, sampling approaches, and existing data sources on utilization are reviewed. Recommendations for health care utilization research are summarized and highlight the importance of designing studies and generating data for investigation of the factors facilitating patients' use of an optimal array of services including prevention, long-term, and rehabilitation care.
Introduction:Preventable hospitalizations are responsible for increasing the cost of health care and reflect ineffectiveness of the health services in the primary care setting. The objective of this study was to assess expenditure for hospitalizations and utilize expenditure differentials to determine factors associated with ambulatory care - sensitive conditions (ACSCs) hospitalizations.Methods:A cross-sectional study of hospitalizations among Medicaid enrollees in comprehensive managed care plans in 2009 was conducted. A total of 25 581 patients were included in the analysis. Expenditures on hospitalizations were examined at the 50th, 75th, 90th, and 95th expenditure percentiles both at the bivariate level and in the logistic regression model to determine the impact of differing expenditure on ACSC hospitalizations.Results:Compared with patients without ACSC admissions, a larger proportion of patients with ACSC hospitalizations required advanced treatment or died on admission. Overall mean expenditures were higher for the ACSC group than for non-ACSC group (US$18 070 vs US$14 452). Whites and blacks had higher expenditures for ACSC hospitalization than Hispanics at all expenditure percentiles. Patient’s age remained a consistent predictor of ACSC hospitalization across all expenditure percentiles. Patients with ACSC were less likely to have a procedure on admission; however, the likelihood decreased as expenditure percentiles increased. At the median expenditure, blacks and Hispanics were more likely than other race/ethnic groups to have ACSC hospitalizations (odds ratio [OR]: 1.307, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.013-1.686 and OR 1.252, 95% CI: 1.060-1.479, respectively).Conclusion:Future review of delivery and monitoring of services at the primary care setting should include managed care plans in order to enhance access and overall quality of care for optimal utilization of the resources.
We examined the impact of environmental factors on USA nursing homes' participation in the subacute care market. Findings suggest that the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 did not have a significant impact in the participation of nursing homes in the subacute care market from 1998 to 2000. However, there was a declining trend in the participation of nursing homes in the subacute care market after the implementation of Medicare prospective payment system (PPS). Furthermore, nursing homes with a higher proportion of Medicare residents were more likely to exit the subacute care market after PPS. Results also suggest that nursing homes have responded strategically to the environmental demand for subacute care services. Nursing homes located in markets with higher Medicare managed care penetration were more likely to offer subacute care services. Environmental munificence was also an important predictor of nursing home innovation into subacute care. Nursing homes in states with higher Medicaid reimbursement and those in less competitive markets were more likely to participate in the subacute care market.
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