Background:
Attending clinic appointments supports HIV viral suppression, yet racial disparities are documented. We assessed whether multilevel resilience resources were associated with appointment attendance among African American/Black (AA/B) adults living with HIV in the U.S.
Methods:
We ascertained data from 291 AA/B clinical cohort participants from 2018-2021. We assessed resilience using the Multilevel Resilience Resource Measure. Binary outcomes were a non-repeated indicator of attending ≥87.5% of scheduled HIV appointments over 12-months (i.e., visit adherence) and a repeated measure of attending appointments during two sequential 6-month follow-up windows (i.e., clinic attendance). Modified Poisson models estimated adjusted risk ratios (aRRs).
Results:
The aRR for clinic attendance among participants with greater versus lesser multilevel resilience resource endorsement was 0.95 (95% CI: 0.88-1.0). The aRR for visit adherence among participants with greater versus lesser multilevel resilience resource endorsement was 1.2 (0.95-1.4).
Conclusions:
This analysis is one of the first to assess appointment attendance as a function of resilience. Findings should be confirmed in larger cohorts.