Though much information about HIV care is already available, this data is often limited by the use of non-representative patient samples. Hence, it cannot be used to accurately determine national trends in HIV care. The HIV Cost and Services Utilization Study (HCSUS), however, has generated nationally representative data that can directly answer the questions posed above. This data, collected by an innovative method of probability sampling, also provides a national context for interpreting the results of previous studies based on non-representative samples.
Almost 90 percent of those represented by the HCSUS were less than 50 years old. Slightly more than three-quarters were men; about half were non-Hispanic whites, while one-third were African-Americans. Overall, their incomes tended to be quite low: 46 percent had an annual household income of less than $10,000, a level that places them in the bottom quintile of the general population.
Of the 231,400 HIV-infected adults directly represented by the HCSUS, an unexpectedly high 59 percent met the CDC case definition for AIDS. This finding contrasts with natural history studies, which indicate that only about 35 percent of those with HIV infection meet the AIDS criteria. Thus, the HCSUS data suggests that many of those in the early stages of the disease are not receiving regular medical care.
For adults receiving regular care for their HIV infection (at least one visit every six months), direct medical expenditures on HIV care were estimated to be $20,000 per patient per year, or approximately $6.7 billion for all HIV care in 1996. Hospital care (46 percent) and pharmaceuticals (40 percent) accounted for the bulk of the expenditures. Outpatient care (12 percent) and emergency department care (2 percent) comprised the remainder. Though these sums are significant, they are not unreasonable in context of the morbidity and mortality associated with HIV/AIDS: HIV accounts for 8 percent of the total potential years of life lost in the United States, but HIV care constitutes less than 1 percent of direct health care expenditures.
The HIV Cost and Services Utilization Study is being conducted by a consortium of private and public institutions under cooperative agreement U-01HS08578 between RAND (M. F. Shapiro, S. A. Bozzette, S. H. Berry, S. C. Morton, and A. A. Leibowitz) and the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (D. Lefkowitz, J. A. Fleishman, R. Arnett).
Collaborating funders include the Health Services Resources Administration, the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute on Drug Abuse, and the National Institutes of Health Office of Research on Minority Health through the National Institute of Dental Research, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Merck and Company, Glaxo-Wellcome, Quest Diagnostics, Hoffmann-LaRoche, the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Collaborating research institutions include the National Opinion Research Center, RAND Survey Research Group, Project Hope, University of California Los Angeles and San Diego, the Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, Charles R. Drew University, Brown University, University of Rochester, Jefferson Medical College, Harvard University, and the VA Center for the Study of Healthcare Provider Behavior. Additional information about HCSUS can be found on the World Wide Web at http://www.rand.org/health/hcsus/.
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