Am
J Public Health 1993 Apr;83(4):510-4
The effects of immune status and race on health service use among people
with HIV disease.
Piette JD, Mor V, Mayer K, Zierler S, Wachtel T.
Brown University's AIDS Program, Providence, RI.
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to examine
the relationship between CD4 lymphocyte count and health service use,
and to determine whether differences in the rates of service use between
Whites and people of color could be identified.
METHODS: Medical records for 571 HIV-infected individuals
were analyzed. Incidence rates and relative rates across CD4 strata (defined
by cell counts) were calculated for inpatient and outpatient events. Rate
ratios comparing people of color with Whites were estimated within strata,
adjusting for confounding factors using a Mantel-Haenszel pooling procedure.
RESULTS: Both inpatient and outpatient service use increased
over progressively lower levels of CD4 counts. Within each CD4 stratum
and controlling for other factors, White participants had more HIV clinic
visits and fewer admissions than people of color. Among participants with
fewer than 51 CD4 cells per cubic millimeter, people of color were admitted
20% more often, had 35% more inpatient days per person-year, and had only
74% as many HIV clinic visits as their White counterparts.
CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that CD4 lymphocyte
count is strongly associated with increased usage of health services.
People of color with HIV disease are more likely than similar Whites to
be admitted to the hospital and less likely to use outpatient care.
PMID: 8096368 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]