Utilization of home care among people with HIV infection.

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OBJECTIVE: To examine factors affecting the utilization of formal and informal home care services by people with HIV infection. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SETTING: Study participants are adults with HIV infection receiving services at major providers of medical care in ten U.S. cities. Six interviews were conducted over an 18-month period (March 1991 to September 1992). DATA COLLECTION METHODS: Data on home care utilization, personal background characteristics, insurance status, and functional status are based on self-report. Disease stage is based on medical record data. STUDY DESIGN: This is an observational study using a panel survey design. Cross-tabular and longitudinal regression analyses (N = 1,727) were conducted to determine the effects of sociodemographic factors, functional status, disease stage, and insurance status on the receipt of home care from nurses, paraprofessionals, other professional providers, household residents, nonresident family and friends, and volunteers. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Over a 12-month period, 16 percent of respondents received home nursing visits; 11 percent received paraprofessional care (e.g., nurse's aides, helpers); 4 percent received help from volunteers; 11 percent from non-resident family or friends, and 21 percent from household members. Among the subgroup with AIDS (n = 837), corresponding percentages were 29, 20, 7, 17, and 29 percent for each provider type. In multivariate analyses, illness stage and functional status had strong effects on odds of utilization. Blacks and Hispanics were less likely than whites to have nursing care, but racial/ethnic group did not affect receipt of informal care. CONCLUSIONS: Home care utilization is concentrated among people with AIDS, compared to those at less advanced disease stages. In addition to functional limitations, fatigue is associated with the use of home care. Nursing and non-nursing home care have somewhat different correlates. Medicaid may provide better coverage of personal care services than private insurance.

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