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Front Public Health ; 10: 823193, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35252098

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although the simplification of antiretroviral (AVR) treatment regimens and follow-up has led to fewer constraints for patients with HIV, their follow-up remains of paramount importance to optimize AVR therapy, to detect and prevent HIV-related morbidity, and prevent secondary infections. The problem of follow-up interruption in French Guiana has been persistent and seemingly impervious to efforts to alleviate it. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to follow the trend of follow-up interruptions and to test the hypothesis that an increasing number of patients was, in fact, followed by private practitioners. METHOD: Using the complementary lenses of the hospital HIV cohort and the health insurance information system, we looked at the incidence of follow-up interruption and the proportion of patients followed by private practitioners. RESULTS: We tallied 803 persons that were not known to have died and who were lost to follow-up. Over time, hospital outpatients were lost to follow-up significantly sooner. By contrast, there was a significant trend with more and more patients exclusively followed by private practitioners. CONCLUSION: While hospital outpatient care remains by far the most common mode of patient care, there seems to be a gradual erosion of this model in favor of private practice.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections , Anti-Retroviral Agents , Cohort Studies , French Guiana/epidemiology , HIV Infections/epidemiology , HIV Infections/therapy , Humans , Incidence
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