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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 Apr 19.
Published in final edited form as: AIDS Behav. 2013 Jul;17(6):1941–1962. doi: 10.1007/s10461-013-0435-y

Table 2.

Summary of Intervention Strategies and Findings on Linkage to Care Outcomes (6 Findings)

Study
Name
First
Author
(Year)
Intervention Strategies Findings Significance
and Evidence?
ARTAS Gardner (2005) [60]
  • Identify and address client needsd

  • Encourage contact with an HIV medical care providerg

  • Accompany to medical and other appointmentsa

  • Build a relationship with the clientg

  • Identify internal strengths and develop resourcesg

  • Measure: % newly diagnosed participants visited HIV clinician at least once in past 6 months

  • Between-group Comparison:78% vs. 60% (intervention vs. control); adjusted Relative Risk = 1.36, p =.0005

Yes; Tier I
ARTAS II Craw (2008) [58]
  • Identify and address client needsd

  • Encourage contact with an HIV medical care providerg

  • Accompany to medical and other appointmentsa

  • Build a relationship with a clientg

  • Identify internal strengths and develop resourcesg

  • Measure: % newly diagnosed participants received care from a HIV care provider during past 6 months

  • Post-data: 79%

Yes, Tier III
California Bridge Project Molitor (2006) [62]
  • Accompany to medical and other appointmentsa

  • Referrals to services to services such as support groups, benefits counseling, drug or alcohol treatment, and medical services at an early intervention projectd,e

  • Transport clients to agenciesh

  • Measure % participants were linked to HIV medical care at 15 months post baseline

  • Post-data: 29%

Indeterminatei
HRSA-SPNS MSM of Color Hightow-Weidman (2011) [52](7 sites)
  • Increase youth self-efficacy to enter and remain in culturally and developmentally appropriate HIV primary careg

  • Clinic appointment remindersc

  • Case finding for patients who missed appointments (telephone calls, texts, emails, home visits)c

  • Transportationh

  • Measure: % newly diagnosed participants who were linked to HIV care within 90 days of diagnosis

  • Post-data: 87%

Yes, Tier III
HRSA-SPNS Outreach Naar-King (2007) [63]
  • Offer support to address stigmag

  • Refer patients to subspecialty cared

  • Offer intensive outreach to offer HIV education and supportf

  • Measure: % newly diagnosed participants had a medical appointment in past 6 months

  • Post-Data: 92%

Yes, Tier III
HRSA-SPNS Outreach Initiative Coleman (2009) [57]
  • Face-to-face meetings with the participants to inquire about their well-being and progress in obtaining services and reaching their goalsg

  • Appointment coordinationc

  • Service coordinationd

  • Provide concrete services to meet subsistence needs (food, clothing, housing, transportation, harm reduction supplies)b,h

  • Address health care needsd

  • Accompany client to appointmenta

  • Counselingg

  • Provide HIV/risk reduction educationg

  • Provide program informationg

  • Health care referralsd

  • Outreachf

  • Measure: % newly diagnosed participants had at least one HIV primary care visit at 6 months

  • Post-data: 90% had an visit

Yes, Tier III

ARTAS = Antiretroviral Treatment Access Study

BRIGHT = Bridges to Good Health and Treatment

HRSA SPNS Outreach = HRSA SPNS Outreach Initiative

HRSA SPNS MSM of Color = HRSA SPNS Outreach, Care, and Prevention to Engage HIV Seropositive Young MSM of Color

INSPIRE = Interventions for Seropositive Injectors—Research and Evaluation

Intervention Strategies

a

= Accompany to appointments

b

= Ancillary services

c

= Appointment coordination/reminders/follow-up if appointment missed

d

= Case management

e

= Co-location of services

f

= Outreach

g

= Counseling and psychosocial support strategies (e.g., counseling, relationship building, providing knowledge, emotional support)

h

= Transportation

Findings

i

= post data only and Marks’ meta-analysis estimate for linkage cannot apply as study participants were not newly diagnosed patients