Meg Sullivan
Boston University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Meg Sullivan.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2012
Michael J. Mugavero; Andrew O. Westfall; Anne Zinski; Jessica A. Davila; Mari-Lynn Drainoni; Lytt I. Gardner; Jeanne C. Keruly; Faye Malitz; Gary Marks; Lisa Metsch; Tracey E. Wilson; Thomas P. Giordano; M. L. Drainoni; C. Ferreira; L. Koppelman; R. Lewis; M. McDoom; M. Naisteter; K. Osella; G. Ruiz; Paul R. Skolnik; Meg Sullivan; S. Gibbs-Cohen; E. Desrivieres; M. Frederick; K. Gravesande; Susan Holman; H. Johnson; T. Taylor; T. Wilson
Background:Measuring retention in HIV primary care is complex, as care includes multiple visits scheduled at varying intervals over time. We evaluated 6 commonly used retention measures in predicting viral load (VL) suppression and the correlation among measures. Methods:Clinic-wide patient-level data from 6 academic HIV clinics were used for 12 months preceding implementation of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Health Resources and Services Administration (CDC/HRSA) retention in care intervention. Six retention measures were calculated for each patient based on scheduled primary HIV provider visits: count and dichotomous missed visits, visit adherence, 6-month gap, 4-month visit constancy, and the HRSA HIV/AIDS Bureau (HRSA HAB) retention measure. Spearman correlation coefficients and separate unadjusted logistic regression models compared retention measures with one another and with 12-month VL suppression, respectively. The discriminatory capacity of each measure was assessed with the c-statistic. Results:Among 10,053 patients, 8235 (82%) had 12-month VL measures, with 6304 (77%) achieving suppression (VL <400 copies/mL). All 6 retention measures were significantly associated (P < 0.0001) with VL suppression (odds ratio; 95% CI, c-statistic): missed visit count (0.73; 0.71 to 0.75, 0.67), missed visit dichotomous (3.2; 2.8 to 3.6, 0.62), visit adherence (3.9; 3.5 to 4.3,0.69), gap (3.0; 2.6 to 3.3, 0.61), visit constancy (2.8; 2.5 to 3.0, 0.63), and HRSA HAB (3.8; 3.3 to 4.4, 0.59). Measures incorporating “no-show” visits were highly correlated (Spearman coefficient = 0.83–0.85), as were measures based solely on kept visits (Spearman coefficient = 0.72–0.77). Correlation coefficients were lower across these 2 groups of measures (range = 0.16–0.57). Conclusions:Six retention measures displayed a wide range of correlation with one another, yet each measure had significant association and modest discrimination for VL suppression. These data suggest there is no clear gold standard and that selection of a retention measure may be tailored to context.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2014
Lytt I. Gardner; Thomas P. Giordano; Gary Marks; Tracey E. Wilson; Jason Craw; Mari-Lynn Drainoni; Jeanne C. Keruly; Allan Rodriguez; Faye Malitz; Richard D. Moore; Lucy Bradley-Springer; Susan Holman; Charles E. Rose; Sonali Girde; Meg Sullivan; Lisa R. Metsch; Michael S. Saag; Michael J. Mugavero
BACKGROUND The aim of the study was to determine whether enhanced personal contact with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients across time improves retention in care compared with existing standard of care (SOC) practices, and whether brief skills training improves retention beyond enhanced contact. METHODS The study, conducted at 6 HIV clinics in the United States, included 1838 patients with a recent history of inconsistent clinic attendance, and new patients. Each clinic randomized participants to 1 of 3 arms and continued to provide SOC practices to all enrollees: enhanced contact with interventionist (EC) (brief face-to-face meeting upon returning for care visit, interim visit call, appointment reminder calls, missed visit call); EC + skills (organization, problem solving, and communication skills); or SOC only. The intervention was delivered by project staff for 12 months following randomization. The outcomes during that 12-month period were (1) percentage of participants attending at least 1 primary care visit in 3 consecutive 4-month intervals (visit constancy), and (2) proportion of kept/scheduled primary care visits (visit adherence). RESULTS Log-binomial risk ratios comparing intervention arms against the SOC arm demonstrated better outcomes in both the EC and EC + skills arms (visit constancy: risk ratio [RR], 1.22 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 1.09-1.36] and 1.22 [95% CI, 1.09-1.36], respectively; visit adherence: RR, 1.08 [95% CI, 1.05-1.11] and 1.06 [95% CI, 1.02-1.09], respectively; all Ps < .01). Intervention effects were observed in numerous patient subgroups, although they were lower in patients reporting unmet needs or illicit drug use. CONCLUSIONS Enhanced contact with patients improved retention in HIV primary care compared with existing SOC practices. A brief patient skill-building component did not improve retention further. Additional intervention elements may be needed for patients reporting illicit drug use or who have unmet needs. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION CDCHRSA9272007.
JAMA | 2016
Lisa R. Metsch; Daniel J. Feaster; Lauren Gooden; Tim Matheson; Maxine L. Stitzer; Moupali Das; Mamta K. Jain; Allan Rodriguez; Wendy S. Armstrong; Gregory M. Lucas; Ank E. Nijhawan; Mari-Lynn Drainoni; Patricia Herrera; Pamela Vergara-Rodriguez; Jeffrey M. Jacobson; Michael J. Mugavero; Meg Sullivan; Eric S. Daar; Deborah McMahon; David C. Ferris; Robert Lindblad; Paul Van Veldhuisen; Neal L. Oden; Pedro C. Castellon; Susan Tross; Louise Haynes; Antoine Douaihy; James L. Sorensen; David S. Metzger; Raul N. Mandler
IMPORTANCE Substance use is a major driver of the HIV epidemic and is associated with poor HIV care outcomes. Patient navigation (care coordination with case management) and the use of financial incentives for achieving predetermined outcomes are interventions increasingly promoted to engage patients in substance use disorders treatment and HIV care, but there is little evidence for their efficacy in improving HIV-1 viral suppression rates. OBJECTIVE To assess the effect of a structured patient navigation intervention with or without financial incentives to improve HIV-1 viral suppression rates among patients with elevated HIV-1 viral loads and substance use recruited as hospital inpatients. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS From July 2012 through January 2014, 801 patients with HIV infection and substance use from 11 hospitals across the United States were randomly assigned to receive patient navigation alone (n = 266), patient navigation plus financial incentives (n = 271), or treatment as usual (n = 264). HIV-1 plasma viral load was measured at baseline and at 6 and 12 months. INTERVENTIONS Patient navigation included up to 11 sessions of care coordination with case management and motivational interviewing techniques over 6 months. Financial incentives (up to
Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 2014
Mari-Lynn Drainoni; Meg Sullivan; Shwetha Sequeira; Janine Bacic; Katherine Hsu
1160) were provided for achieving targeted behaviors aimed at reducing substance use, increasing engagement in HIV care, and improving HIV outcomes. Treatment as usual was the standard practice at each hospital for linking hospitalized patients to outpatient HIV care and substance use disorders treatment. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome was HIV viral suppression (≤200 copies/mL) relative to viral nonsuppression or death at the 12-month follow-up. RESULTS Of 801 patients randomized, 261 (32.6%) were women (mean [SD] age, 44.6 years [10.0 years]). There were no differences in rates of HIV viral suppression versus nonsuppression or death among the 3 groups at 12 months. Eighty-five of 249 patients (34.1%) in the usual-treatment group experienced treatment success compared with 89 of 249 patients (35.7%) in the navigation-only group for a treatment difference of 1.6% (95% CI, -6.8% to 10.0%; P = .80) and compared with 98 of 254 patients (38.6%) in the navigation-plus-incentives group for a treatment difference of 4.5% (95% CI -4.0% to 12.8%; P = .68). The treatment difference between the navigation-only and the navigation-plus-incentives group was -2.8% (95% CI, -11.3% to 5.6%; P = .68). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Among hospitalized patients with HIV infection and substance use, patient navigation with or without financial incentives did not have a beneficial effect on HIV viral suppression relative to nonsuppression or death at 12 months vs treatment as usual. These findings do not support these interventions in this setting. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01612169.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2010
Richa Tandon; Amy S. Baranoski; Faye Huang; Antonio de las Morenas; Olivera Vragovic; Meg Sullivan; Elizabeth A. Stier
Background In the Affordable Care Act era, no-cost-to-patient publicly funded sexually transmitted infection (STI) clinics have been challenged as the standard STI care delivery model. This study examined the impact of removing public funding and instituting a flat fee within an STI clinic under state-mandated insurance coverage. Methods Cross-sectional database analysis examined changes in visit volumes, demographics, and payer mix for 4 locations in Massachusetts’ largest safety net hospital (STI clinic, primary care [PC], emergency department [ED], obstetrics/gynecology [OB/GYN] for 3 periods: early health reform implementation, reform fully implemented but public STI clinic funding retained, termination of public funding and institution of a US
Aids Patient Care and Stds | 2013
April Buscher; Michael J. Mugavero; Andrew O. Westfall; Jeanne C. Keruly; Richard D. Moore; Mari-Lynn Drainoni; Meg Sullivan; Tracey E. Wilson; Allan Rodriguez; Lisa R. Metsch; Lytt I. Gardner; Gary Marks; Faye Malitz; Thomas P. Giordano
75 fee in STI clinic for those not using insurance). Results Sexually transmitted infection visits decreased 20% in STI clinic (P < 0.001), increased 107% in PC (P < 0.001), slightly decreased in ED, and did not change in OB/GYN. The only large demographic shift observed was in the sex of PC patients—women comprised 51% of PC patients seen for STI care in the first time period, but rose sharply to 70% in the third time period (P < 0.0001). After termination of public funding, 50% of STI clinic patients paid flat fee, 35% used public insurance, and 15% used private insurance. Conclusions Mandatory insurance, public funding loss, and institution of a flat STI clinic fee were associated with overall decreases in STI visit volume, with significant STI clinic visit decreases and PC STI visit increases. This may indicate partial shifting of STI services into PC. Half of STI clinic patients chose to pay the flat fee even after reform was fully implemented.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2015
Ram K. Shrestha; Lytt I. Gardner; Gary Marks; Jason Craw; Faye Malitz; Thomas P. Giordano; Meg Sullivan; Jeanne C. Keruly; Allan Rodriguez; Tracey E. Wilson; Michael J. Mugavero
OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of and risk factors for abnormal anal cytology and human papillomavirus (HPV) infections in women who are human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) positive. STUDY DESIGN We conducted an observational single center study of 100 HIV-infected women with cervical and anal specimens that were obtained for cytologic and high-risk HPV testing with Hybrid Capture 2. RESULTS Seventeen women had abnormal anal cytology; 16 women had anal HPV; 21 women had abnormal cervical cytology, and 24 women had cervical HPV. Abnormal anal cytology was associated with cervical HPV infection, abnormal cervical cytology, and anal HPV infection in univariate analysis. In multivariate analysis, abnormal anal cytology was associated with a CD4 count <200 cells/mm(3), a history of sexually transmitted disease, and concurrent cervical cytologic abnormality. CONCLUSION HIV-infected women are at high risk for abnormal cytology and HPV infections of both the anus and cervix. Risk factors for abnormal anal cytology include abnormal cervical cytology, cervical and anal HPV infections, and low CD4 count.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2016
Gary Marks; Unnati Patel; Michael J. Stirratt; Michael J. Mugavero; William C. Mathews; Thomas P. Giordano; Nicole Crepaz; Lytt I. Gardner; Cynthia I. Grossman; Jessica A. Davila; Meg Sullivan; Charles E. Rose; Christine OʼDaniels; Allan Rodriguez; Andrew J. Wawrzyniak; Matthew R. Golden; Shireesha Dhanireddy; Jacqueline Ellison; Mari-Lynn Drainoni; Lisa R. Metsch; Edward R. Cachay
The recommendation for the frequency for routine clinical monitoring of persons with well-controlled HIV infection is based on evidence that relies on observed rather than intended follow-up intervals. We sought to determine if the scheduled follow-up interval is associated with subsequent virologic failure. Participants in this 6-clinic retrospective cohort study had an index clinic visit in 2008 and HIV viral load (VL) ≤400 c/mL. Univariate and multivariate tests evaluated if scheduling the next follow-up appointment at 3, 4, or 6 months predicted VL >400 c/mL at 12 months (VF). Among 2171 participants, 66%, 26%, and 8% were scheduled next follow-up visits at 3, 4, and 6 months, respectively. With missing 12-month VL considered VF, 25%, 25%, and 24% of persons scheduled at 3, 4, and 6 months had VF, respectively (p=0.95). Excluding persons with missing 12-month VL, 7.1%, 5.7%, and 4.5% had VF, respectively (p=0.35). Multivariable models yielded nonsignificant odds of VF by scheduled follow-up interval both when missing 12-month VL were considered VF and when persons with missing 12-month VL were excluded. We conclude that clinicians are able to make safe decisions extending follow-up intervals in persons with viral suppression, at least in the short-term.
Medicine | 2017
Alicia S. Ventura; Michael Winter; Timothy Heeren; Meg Sullivan; Alexander Y. Walley; Michael F. Holick; Gregory Patts; Seville Meli; Jeffrey H. Samet; Richard Saitz
Background:Retaining HIV patients in medical care promotes access to antiretroviral therapy, viral load suppression, and reduced HIV transmission to partners. We estimate the programmatic costs of a US multisite randomized controlled trial of an intervention to retain HIV patients in care. Methods:Six academically affiliated HIV clinics randomized patients to intervention (enhanced personal contact with patients across time coupled with basic HIV education) and control [standard of care (SOC)] arms. Retention in care was defined as 4-month visit constancy, that is, at least 1 primary care visit in each 4-month interval over a 12-month period. We used microcosting methods to collect unit costs and measure the quantity of resources used to implement the intervention in each clinic. All fixed and variable labor and nonlabor costs of the intervention were included. Results:Visit constancy was achieved by 45.7% (280/613) of patients in the SOC arm and by 55.8% (343/615) of patients in the intervention arm, representing an increase of 63 patients (relative improvement 22.1%; 95% confidence interval: 9% to 36%; P < 0.01). The total annual cost of the intervention at the 6 clinics was
Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2017
Seonaid Nolan; Alexander Y. Walley; Timothy Heeren; Gregory Patts; Alicia S. Ventura; Meg Sullivan; Jeffrey H. Samet; Richard Saitz
241,565, the average cost per patient was