Martin F. Shapiro
University of California, Los Angeles
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The New England Journal of Medicine | 1998
Samuel A. Bozzette; Sandra H. Berry; Naihua Duan; Martin R. Frankel; Arleen Leibowitz; Lefkowitz D; Carol-Ann Emmons; Senterfitt Jw; Marc L. Berk; Sally C. Morton; Martin F. Shapiro
BACKGROUND AND METHODS In order to elucidate the medical care of patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in the United States, we randomly sampled HIV-infected adults receiving medical care in the contiguous United States at a facility other than military, prison, or emergency department facility during the first two months of 1996. We interviewed 76 percent of 4042 patients selected from among the patients receiving care from 145 providers in 28 metropolitan areas and 51 providers in 25 rural areas. RESULTS During the first two months of 1996, an estimated 231,400 HIV-infected adults (95 percent confidence interval, 162,800 to 300,000) received care. Fifty-nine percent had the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome according to the case definition of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and 91 percent had CD4+ cell counts of less than 500 per cubic millimeter. Eleven percent were 50 years of age or older, 23 percent were women, 33 percent were black, and 49 percent were men who had had sex with men. Forty-six percent had incomes of less than
The American Journal of Medicine | 2000
Ron D. Hays; William E. Cunningham; Cathy D. Sherbourne; Ira B. Wilson; Albert W. Wu; Paul D. Cleary; Daniel F. McCaffrey; John A. Fleishman; Stephen Crystal; Rebecca L. Collins; Ferd Eggan; Martin F. Shapiro; Samuel A. Bozzette
10,000 per year, 68 percent had public health insurance or no insurance, and 30 percent received care at teaching institutions. The estimated annual direct expenditures for the care of the patients seen during the first two months of 1996 were
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1984
Nicole Lurie; Nancy B. Ward; Martin F. Shapiro; Robert H. Brook
5.1 billion; the expenditures for the estimated 335,000 HIV-infected adults seen at least as often as every six months were
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2001
Samuel A. Bozzette; Geoffrey F. Joyce; Daniel F. McCaffrey; Arleen Leibowitz; Sally C. Morton; Sandra H. Berry; Afshin Rastegar; David Timberlake; Martin F. Shapiro; Dana P. Goldman
6.7 billion, which is about
Medical Care | 1999
William E. Cunningham; Ronald Andersen; Mitchell H. Katz; Michael D. Stein; Barbara J. Turner; Steve Crystal; Sally Zierler; Kiyoshi Kuromiya; Sally C. Morton; Patricia A. St. Clair; Samuel A. Bozzette; Martin F. Shapiro
20,000 per patient per year. CONCLUSIONS In this national survey we found that most HIV-infected adults who were receiving medical care had advanced disease. The patient population was disproportionately male, black, and poor. Many Americans with diagnosed or undiagnosed HIV infection are not receiving medical care at least as often as every six months. The total cost of medical care for HIV-infected Americans accounts for less than 1 percent of all direct personal health expenditures in the United States.
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1992
Michael S. Wilkes; Bruce H. Doblin; Martin F. Shapiro
PURPOSE To measure health-related quality of life among adult patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease; to compare the health-related quality of life of adults with HIV with that of the general population and with patients with other chronic conditions; and to determine the associations of demographic variables and disease severity with health-related quality of life. SUBJECTS AND METHODS We studied 2,864 HIV-infected adults participating in the HIV Cost and Services Utilization Study, a probability sample of adults with HIV receiving health care in the contiguous United States (excluding military hospitals, prisons, or emergency rooms). A battery of 28 items covering eight domains of health (physical functioning, emotional well-being, role functioning, pain, general health perceptions, social functioning, energy, disability days) was administered. The eight domains were combined into physical and mental health summary scores. SF-36 physical functioning and emotional well-being scales were compared with the US general population and patients with other chronic diseases on a 0 to 100 scale. RESULTS Physical functioning was about the same for adults with asymptomatic HIV disease as for the US population [mean (+/- SD) of 92+/-16 versus 90+/-17) but was much worse for those with symptomatic HIV disease (76+/-28) or who met criteria for the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS; 58+/-31). Patients with AIDS had worse physical functioning than those with other chronic diseases (epilepsy, gastroesophageal reflux disease, clinically localized prostate cancer, clinical depression, diabetes) for which comparable data were available. Emotional well-being was comparable among patients with various stages of HIV disease (asymptomatic, 62+/-9; symptomatic, 59+/-11; AIDS, 59+/-11), but was significantly worse than the general population and patients with other chronic diseases except depression. In multivariate analyses, HIV-related symptoms were strongly associated with physical and mental health, whereas race, sex, health insurance status, disease stage, and CD4 count were at most weakly associated with physical and mental health. CONCLUSIONS There is substantial morbidity associated with HIV disease in adults. The variability in health-related quality of life according to disease progression is relevant for health policy and allocation of resources, and merits the attention of clinicians who treat patients with HIV disease.
Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2003
Steven M. Asch; Amy M. Kilbourne; Allen L. Gifford; M. Audrey Burnam; Barbara J. Turner; Martin F. Shapiro; Samuel A. Bozzette
To control rising health-care costs, California enacted legislation in 1982 that eliminated its Medicaid program (Medi-Cal) for its 270,000 medically indigent adults.1 Medically indigent adults are...
American Journal of Public Health | 2000
Sally Zierler; William E. Cunningham; R.M. Andersen; Martin F. Shapiro; Sam Bozzette; Terry T. Nakazono; Sally C. Morton; Stephen Crystal; Michael D. Stein; Barbara J. Turner; Patti St. Clair
BACKGROUND The introduction of expensive but very effective antiviral medications has led to questions about the effects on the total use of resources for the care of patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. We examined expenditures for the care of HIV-infected patients since the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy. METHODS We interviewed a random sample of 2864 patients who were representative of all American adults receiving care for HIV infection in early 1996, and followed them for up to 36 months. We estimated the average expenditure per patient per month on the basis of self-reported information about care received. RESULTS The mean expenditure was
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2000
William E. Cunningham; Leona E. Markson; Ronald Andersen; Stephen Crystal; John A. Fleishman; Carol E. Golin; Allen L. Gifford; Honghu H. Liu; Terry T. Nakazono; Sally C. Morton; Samuel A. Bozzette; Martin F. Shapiro; Neil S. Wenger
1,792 per patient per month at base line, but it declined to
Annals of Internal Medicine | 2001
Karl A. Lorenz; Martin F. Shapiro; Steven M. Asch; Samuel A. Bozzette; Ron D. Hays
1,359 for survivors in 1997, since the increases in pharmaceutical expenditures were smaller than the reductions in hospital costs. Use of highly active antiretroviral therapy was independently associated with a reduction in expenditures. After adjustments for the interview date, clinical status, and deaths, the estimated annual expenditure declined from