Gabriela Alejandra Blugerman, José Antonio Valiente, Carina Cesar, Cleyton Yamamoto, Omar Sued, Pedro Cahn
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Home-hospital distance and travel time were obtained with Google Maps Distance Matrix API<sup>®</sup> service.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Of 1020 patients who started follow-up, 15 died and 158 were transferred to another site. Of the remaining, 816 (96.3%) had identifiable address in their electronic medical record. Median age at the time of the first visit was 33 (IQR 27-41) years, 654 (77.9%) patients were male. Median home-hospital distance was 10.3 (IQR 4.4-34.7) km and median travel time was 58.5 (IQR 35-102.5) minutes. 730 patients (89.5%; CI 87.1-91.5%) remained in follow-up after 1 year of their first visit. We didńt find association between travel time and home-hospital distance with retention in this population.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>In our study, distance between home and the care center was not associated with lower retention one year after first visit in adult HIV patients attending a public hospital.</p>","PeriodicalId":72064,"journal":{"name":"Actualizaciones en SIDA e infectologia","volume":"26 98","pages":"54-60"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9886959/pdf/nihms-1868025.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"[Retention in care and distance between home and hospital in HIV patients of Buenos Aires City].\",\"authors\":\"Gabriela Alejandra Blugerman, José Antonio Valiente, Carina Cesar, Cleyton Yamamoto, Omar Sued, Pedro Cahn\",\"doi\":\"10.52226/revista.v26i98.21\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Distance from patient's home to the hospital has been proposed as one of the limiting factors for patient's retention in care.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Retrospective cohort study of HIV+ patients 18 years or older who had their first clinical visit between 2011 and 2013 at a reference center in Buenos Aires, Argentina. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:患者家到医院的距离已被认为是患者保留护理的限制因素之一。方法:对2011 - 2013年在阿根廷布宜诺斯艾利斯某参考中心首次就诊的18岁及以上HIV+患者进行回顾性队列研究。如果患者有> 1次临床就诊,实验室标志物(VL和/或CD4计数)和/或在第一次临床就诊后的一年内出现抗逆转录病毒药物回升,则认为患者继续接受治疗。使用Google Maps®web服务获得每个患者地址的经纬度。通过Google Maps distance Matrix API®服务获得家到医院的距离和出行时间。结果:1020例患者开始随访,15例死亡,158例转移至其他部位。其余的816人(96.3%)在他们的电子病历中有可识别的地址。首次就诊时的中位年龄为33岁(IQR 27-41岁),男性654例(77.9%)。家-医院距离中位数为10.3 km (IQR 4.4-34.7),出行时间中位数为58.5 min (IQR 35-102.5)。730例(89.5%);CI 87.1-91.5%)在首次访视1年后继续随访。我们didńt发现旅行时间和家医院距离与这一人群的滞留率之间存在关联。结论:在我们的研究中,家庭和护理中心的距离与在公立医院就诊的成年HIV患者首次就诊一年后的保留率降低无关。
[Retention in care and distance between home and hospital in HIV patients of Buenos Aires City].
Background: Distance from patient's home to the hospital has been proposed as one of the limiting factors for patient's retention in care.
Methods: Retrospective cohort study of HIV+ patients 18 years or older who had their first clinical visit between 2011 and 2013 at a reference center in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Patients were considered to be retained in care if they had>=1 clinical visit, laboratory markers (VL and/or CD4 count) and/or ARVs pick-up during the year after their first clinical visit. Each patient address's latitude-longitude was obtained using Google Maps® web service. Home-hospital distance and travel time were obtained with Google Maps Distance Matrix API® service.
Results: Of 1020 patients who started follow-up, 15 died and 158 were transferred to another site. Of the remaining, 816 (96.3%) had identifiable address in their electronic medical record. Median age at the time of the first visit was 33 (IQR 27-41) years, 654 (77.9%) patients were male. Median home-hospital distance was 10.3 (IQR 4.4-34.7) km and median travel time was 58.5 (IQR 35-102.5) minutes. 730 patients (89.5%; CI 87.1-91.5%) remained in follow-up after 1 year of their first visit. We didńt find association between travel time and home-hospital distance with retention in this population.
Conclusions: In our study, distance between home and the care center was not associated with lower retention one year after first visit in adult HIV patients attending a public hospital.