May 21, 2019

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Successful HIV effort prompts call for clinics to expand mental health services on site

Kathleen McManus, MD, of the UVA Health System, found that Increasing access to mental health services improves HIV outcomes among vulnerable patients. Based on their findings, the researchers are urging HIV clinics to expand their co-located mental health services. Credit: University of Virginia Health System
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Kathleen McManus, MD, of the UVA Health System, found that Increasing access to mental health services improves HIV outcomes among vulnerable patients. Based on their findings, the researchers are urging HIV clinics to expand their co-located mental health services. Credit: University of Virginia Health System

Increasing access to mental health services improves HIV outcomes among vulnerable patients, a new study from the University of Virginia School of Medicine suggests. Based on their findings, the researchers are urging HIV clinics to expand their on-site mental health services.

"With the president's 'Ending the HIV Epidemic' [goal], we need to be identifying evidence-based programs and policies that help improve HIV outcomes. This study adds to the evidence that co-located , which includes psychiatry, psychology and substance-use counseling, can contribute to improved HIV viral suppression, which is a key health metric for HIV care," said researcher Kathleen McManus, MD, of UVA's Division of Infectious Diseases and International Health. "We hope that this work will encourage more Ryan White HIV/AIDS clinics to seek support for co-located and substance use counseling services."

Improving HIV Care

Seeking to improve outcomes for people living with HIV, UVA's Ryan White Clinic expanded its mental health services in 2013, increasing access to psychiatry and psychology services and substance-use counseling. Between 2012 and 2014, UVA more than doubled the number of clinic patients receiving mental healthcare. Mental health visits at the clinic increased from 385 in 2012 to 941 in 2013 and 1,183 in 2014. (UVA's ability to expand the mental health offerings was made possible by funding from the Health Resources and Services Administration Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program.)

Researchers then compared how patients fared before and after the expansion. They compared one group of 130 patients who initiated mental healthcare before the expansion and another group of 181 patients who initiated mental healthcare after the expansion to get a snapshot of who was gaining access when the availability of mental health services increased. They also examined the HIV outcomes of the patients in the latter group both before and after the expansion.

They found:

Describing their findings in a new article in the scientific journal Open Forum Infectious Diseases, the UVA researchers wrote that expanding mental healthcare at HIV clinics across the country could help the U.S. reach the goal of viral suppression among 90 percent of people with HIV. That would help prevent further transmission of the disease, they noted. "It is an opportunity to improve viral suppression outcomes for , and this is pressing given the worsening of the opioid and substance-use crises," they concluded.

The researchers noted that this was a small, retrospective study and called for additional research to assess if there is a causal relationship between increased access to mental and .

More information: Raina Aggarwal et al, Expanded HIV Clinic–Based Mental Health Care Services: Association With Viral Suppression, Open Forum Infectious Diseases (2019). DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofz146

Provided by University of Virginia Health System

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