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Report examines how often U.S. adults with HIV skip medications due to cost

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Report examines how often U.S. adults with HIV skip medications due to cost
Photo by Navy Medicine / Unsplash

A report examined how often adults living with HIV in the United States do not take their prescribed medications because they cannot afford them. The study looked at data from May 2016 to June 2017. The goal was to understand the scale of this problem, which can affect health outcomes.

The report focused on U.S. adults diagnosed with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The main finding the report aimed to provide was the estimated proportion of these individuals who could not stick to their medication plan due to cost. However, the specific number or percentage was not reported in the available summary of the findings.

This was an observational report, meaning it describes a situation but cannot prove what causes it. We do not know from this summary if the problem got better or worse over time, or what specific factors are involved. No information about safety or side effects from not taking medication was provided.

Readers should understand this is a report highlighting an important issue—medication affordability for people with HIV. The key point is that cost can be a barrier to treatment, which is a known challenge. However, without the specific results, we cannot say how common this problem is based on this report alone.

What this means for you:
A report looked at HIV medication costs as a barrier, but specific findings on how many people are affected were not shared.
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