Illustrations and Implications of Current Models of HIV Health Service Provision in Rural Areas

Abstract
Despite recent evidence of faster than average increases in HIV/AIDS cases in rural areas across the U.S., there is still a generally poor understanding of successful models of rural HIV/AIDS health-care delivery. Past research in rural Kentucky suggested several barriers to care resulting in most rural HIV-positive patients traveling from rural to urban areas for care. Patients sought urban areas for care for reasons including patient confidentiality, a perceived lack of expertise on the part of rural physicians in caring for HIV-positive patients, and outright referral from rural to urban areas. Case histories are used to illustrate a variety of models of care used by rural HIV-positive patients. These include splitting and sharing care between rural primary care physicians and urban medical specialists, as well as patients receiving all their care in urban areas. Implications of these models for quality of care are discussed.