May 30, 2003
There was a large decrease in deaths of HIV-infected persons overall -- from 119 deaths in 1995 to 44 in 1999 and 47 in 2000.
There has long been a widespread assumption that almost anyone in the U.S. can get HIV treatment one way or another. We do not know how much this is true. Perhaps the belief persists because those who cannot get treatment also cannot get public attention.
Pneumocystis prophylaxis costs very little, and failure to use it is not due to the expense of the drugs. In this study many patients were not on prophylaxis because their HIV was not diagnosed -- suggesting lack of medical care, due either to lack of access or to the patients' decisions.
Adherence to HAART was a problem, with 39% (18 patients) of those who died in 1999-2000 without HAART listed as not receiving HAART because they were not adherent -- and 26% not receiving HAART because they were diagnosed shortly before death. We know from general experience that many adherence problems result from difficulty in obtaining a continuing supply of medicine -- including inflexible reimbursement rules that may make it difficult to replace lost medicines, or that leave too short a window to refill a prescription when patients have many other balls in the air. Physicians may not know whether non-adherence is due to economic obstacles.
Parkland Memorial Hospital is well regarded and accepts patients on an ability-to-pay basis. But Texas has long been seen as one of the worst states for access to HIV care (though improving now, due to grassroots organizing).
Cause-of-death studies can give us unique information about how well the medical safety net is working or not working. This one suggests that access to care may be less than generally believed, even before the funding crisis that is developing now.
Copyright 2003 by John S. James. Permission granted for noncommercial reproduction, provided that our address and phone number are included if more than short quotations are used.
ISSN # 1052-4207
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