1. Effects of a hospital discharge clinic among people with HIV: Lack of early follow‐up is associated with 30‐day hospital readmission and decreased retention in care
- Author
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Hill, Lucas, Thompson, Courtney, Balcombe, Shannon, Jain, Sonia, He, Feng, Karris‐Young, Maile, Martin, Thomas CS, Karim, Afsana, Bamford, Laura, and Deiss, Robert
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Patient Readmission ,Patient Discharge ,Retention in Care ,Follow-Up Studies ,Retrospective Studies ,HIV Infections ,Hospitals ,HIV ,readmissions ,substance use disorder ,transitions of care ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology - Abstract
BackgroundThe transition between inpatient and outpatient care for hospitalized people with HIV represents an opportunity for linkage and re-engagement in care. We evaluated whether attendance at a post-hospitalization visit ('discharge clinic') within 1-2 weeks of discharge would reduce readmissions and improve retention in care (RIC) among people with HIV in San Diego, California, USA.MethodsThis was a retrospective cohort study of people with HIV hospitalized between June 2020 and November 2021. Our primary outcome was 30-day readmissions among people with HIV who did or did not attend a discharge clinic visit. Secondary outcomes included the effect of discharge clinic attendance on RIC, along with the impact of attendance at any HIV clinic visit within 30 days of discharge on readmissions and RIC.ResultsWe evaluated 114 people with HIV, of whom 77 (67.5%) and 90 (78.9%) attended a discharge clinic visit or any HIV clinic visit within 30 days of discharge, respectively. Active substance use disorder (SUD) was associated with failing to attend a discharge clinic visit (odds ratio 0.31; 95% confidence interval 0.13-0.77). We observed no significant differences in readmissions between people with HIV who did or did not attend a discharge clinic visit; however, the former had significantly higher 6-month RIC (79.2% vs. 35.1%, p
- Published
- 2024