Evaluation of longitudinal clinical outcomes and adherence to care among HIV-infected refugees

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Abstract

Background: HIV-infected refugees resettled in the United States face many challenges. Longitudinal data regarding HIV-specific outcomes in this population are limited. Methods: We reviewed charts of 51 HIV-infected sub-Saharan African refugees matched to 102 nonrefugees. Outcomes analyzed included CD4 counts, viral loads (VLs), antiretroviral treatment (ART) use, appointment adherence, opportunistic infections, and resistance mutations. Results: The ART initiation was similar. Appointment adherence was similar in year 1, but refugees were significantly less adherent beyond year 3. Refugees and nonrefugees spent similar amounts of time in care suppressed (83% vs 80%, P =.93). Refugees had higher odds of viremia following undetectable VL (OR 2.3, P

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Winston, S. E., Montague, B. T., Lopez, M. J., Delong, A., Lemarchand, C., Bedoya, A., … Beckwith, C. G. (2013, May). Evaluation of longitudinal clinical outcomes and adherence to care among HIV-infected refugees. Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care. https://doi.org/10.1177/1545109712459680

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