Early HIV Diagnosis Leads to Significantly Decreased Costs in the First 2 Years of HIV Care in an Urban Charity Hospital in New Orleans

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Abstract

We undertook a retrospective cohort study of patients with a positive HIV test in the emergency department who were then linked to care. Inpatient, outpatient, and emergency costs were collected for the first 2 years after HIV diagnosis. Fifty-six patients met the inclusion criteria; they were predominantly uninsured (73%) and African American (89%). The median total cost for a newly diagnosed patient over the first 2 years was US$36 808, driven predominantly by outpatient costs of US$17 512. Median inpatient and total costs were significantly different between the lowest (<200 cells/mm3) and highest (>499 cells/mm3) CD4 count categories (US$21 878 vs US$6607, P <100 000 HIV-RNA copies/mL and ≥100 000 HIV-RNA copies/mL (US$28 219 vs US$49 482, P

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Halperin, J., Katz, M., Pathmanathan, I., Myers, L., Van Sickels, N., Seal, P. S., & Richey, L. E. (2017). Early HIV Diagnosis Leads to Significantly Decreased Costs in the First 2 Years of HIV Care in an Urban Charity Hospital in New Orleans. Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care, 16(6), 527–530. https://doi.org/10.1177/2325957417737381

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