Abstract
Patient navigation is a promising strategy for improving health among persons with multiple barriers to HIV care, yet little is known about navigation’s core components. From 24 systematically identified navigation studies, we abstracted navigators’ activities, grouped activities into 20 thematic activity categories, and ordered them by frequency. Subsequently, Principal Components Analysis of activity categories was used identify independent clusters. Accompaniment characterized 71% of navigation programs; ≥ half included health education (58%), collaboration/coordination (58%), linkage-to-care (54%), transportation support (54%), service referrals (50%) and instrumental support (50%). Five unique components (comprising 13 activity categories) were identified: (1) services beyond office, (2) health education and relationship building, (3) accompaniment and instrumental support, (4) locating patients and tracking information, and (5) beyond HIV care. Navigators who located patients or tracked information were less likely to provide accompaniment or instrumental support (r = − 0.60, p = 0.002). Findings can enhance precision in developing, describing, evaluating and improving navigation programs.
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LJK: conceptualized the review, oversaw the intervention abstraction and prepared the original draft; DHH: conducted the statistical analyses; JBD: conducted the literature review; LJK, DHH, CAL, KBR and YM: coded studies; all authors edited the paper and revised it critically for important intellectual contributions.
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Koenig, L.J., Higa, D.H., Leighton, C.A. et al. Toward An Enhanced Understanding of HIV Patient Navigation as a Health Care Intervention: An Analysis of Navigation in Practice. AIDS Behav 25, 4044–4054 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-021-03244-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-021-03244-6