• Can J Public Health · Oct 2019

    Comparative Study

    A comparison of the observed and expected prevalence of HIV in persons released from Ontario provincial prisons in 2010.

    • Ryan Van Meer, Tony Antoniou, Daniel McCormack, Sumeet Khanna, Claire Kendall, Lori Kiefer, and Fiona G Kouyoumdjian.
    • Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
    • Can J Public Health. 2019 Oct 1; 110 (5): 675-682.

    ObjectiveTo estimate the prevalence of HIV infection in persons released from Ontario prisons in 2010 using administrative health data, and to compare this observed prevalence with the expected prevalence based on the most recently available biological sampling data.MethodsWe linked identifying data for all adults released from Ontario provincial prisons in 2010 with administrative health data, and applied a validated algorithm to determine the observed HIV prevalence. We calculated the expected HIV prevalence using 2003-2004 age stratum-specific data from a published study using salivary sampling. We calculated an indirect standardized prevalence ratio of the observed to expected prevalence and 95% confidence intervals. Finally, we conducted sensitivity analyses to adjust for the sensitivity of the algorithm to identify persons with HIV and for undiagnosed HIV infection.ResultsOf 52,313 persons released from Ontario prisons in 2010, we identified 363 persons with HIV, for an observed prevalence of 0.69%. The expected prevalence was 2.38%. Standardized for age, we found a prevalence ratio of 0.29 (95% CI, 0.17-0.77). Sensitivity analyses adjusting for the algorithm's sensitivity and further adjusting for undiagnosed HIV infection produced standardized prevalence ratios of 0.30 and 0.38, respectively.ConclusionOur findings suggest that a high proportion of persons with HIV recently released from provincial prisons either do not know they have HIV infection or do know about their infection but are not engaged in care. Interventions are required to screen people for HIV in prison and to link persons with care following release.

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