
These are the main findings in the initial report from the HIV Cost and Services Utilization Study (HCSUS), the first comprehensive effort to collect information about a nationally representative sample of people receiving care for HIV infection. Sponsored by the Agency for Health Care Policy Research, the study is being led by RAND in conjunction with a consortium of private and public research institutions.
The report is based on data from the study's opening round of interviews with 2,864 patients randomly selected to accurately represent the study's "reference population"--adults in the contiguous 48 states with known HIV infection who received medical care during the first two months of 1996. The study excluded adults treated at military, prison, and emergency room facilities and also excluded children. The interviews sought information primarily on the nature and costs of care, as well as on patient characteristics.
Care settings. Seventy percent of patients received care from office-based physicians and community hospitals and clinics, and the remaining 30 percent received care from major teaching hospitals.
Costs. The cost of treating patients in the reference population was about $5.1 billion annually. This figure is based on data from the first two months of 1996. The authors extrapolated from this figure to estimate that total spending for HIV-infected adults who received medical care at least once every six months in 1996 was about $6.7 billion (approximately $20,000 per patient), or less than 1 percent of all direct personal health care expenditures in the United States. That number is "not inordinate," according to the study, considering that HIV infection accounts for about 7 percent of the total potential years of life lost in the United States.
The most expensive cost component was hospital care, but the costs of pharmaceuticals rose sharply during the course of the study period and were more than double the amount spent on outpatient care (see figure). The authors expect spending on pharmaceuticals to increase further as care providers make more-extensive use of new HIV treatments.
The next phases of the HCSUS study will examine in more detail the issue of disparities in access to care across socioeconomic and racial groups, as well as the impact of variations in insurance coverage, the extent of mental health and substance abuse disorders among HIV patients, and the extent to which HIV is becoming resistant to the new antiretroviral drug therapies.
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