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- From: aids-request@cs.ucla.edu (Sci.med.aids Moderation Team)
- Subject: AIDS FAQ part2of4: Frequently Asked Questions with Answers
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- Date: Wed, 10 Nov 1993 17:38:22 GMT
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-
- ===============================================================================
-
- Section 3. Confidentiality.
-
- Q3.1 How is blood tested in the United States?
- Q3.2 What if a blood-bank finds out you are HIV positive?
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 3.1. How is blood tested in the United States?
-
- All blood products in the U.S. are screened by ELISA assays for several
- infectious agents, including: HIV 1/2, HTLV I/II, HBV, HCV, Syphillis,
- Hepatitis B core, and a liver enzyme ALT, indicative of hepatic
- infections. Some blood donations are also tested for CMV, a more common
- virus that has devestating effects in immunocompromised individuals, such
- as cancer patients and transplant recipients.
-
- In addition to these laboratories, all donors are screened through
- questionaires that meet or exceed FDA requirements.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 3.2. What if a blood-bank finds out you are HIV positive?
-
- The Red Cross and other blood banks routinely test blood donations for HIV
- antibodies.
-
- The Red Cross has specifically asked that people not use blood donation as
- a way of finding out if they are HIV+. If you think you might be
- infected, go get a blood test. Many cities offer free anonymous HIV
- testing. Contact your local public health service office for details.
-
- This is particularly important if you think you might have been infected
- within the last six months, since there's the risk that you are indeed
- infected, but do not yet have antibodies to HIV.
-
- Blood donation is a fine thing to do--but how will you feel if you donate,
- then a month later you find out through some other means that you're HIV+?
- We're supposed to be making a gift of life, not death.
-
- The following article discusses how blood banks use the information, if
- you have tested positive for HIV antibodies. In addition to your possible
- role in killing another person, donating blood to obtain a free HIV test
- also risks your anonymity.
-
- From: McCullough J. The nation's changing blood supply system. JAMA. 1993
- May;269(17):2239-45.
-
- "The coded identity of potential or actual blood donors who are found to
- be unsuitable on the basis of medical history or laboratory testing is
- entered into a donor referral registry (DDR). Before each donated unit of
- blood is made available for use, the coded identity of the donor is
- checked against the DDR to ensure that the donor has not been found to be
- unsuitable during a previous donation. Although potentially infectious
- donors are so informed and asked not to give blood in the future, this
- DDR check is thought to improve the safety of the blood supply by serving
- as an additional way of identifying potentially infectious blood should
- these donors return. The American Red Cross operates a single DDR with
- information from all of its 47 reginal centers. However, other blood
- banks' DDRs act only locally since there is no requirement that different
- blood banks in the same or neighboring communities exchange this DDR
- information. The operation of these DDRs costs money, consumes experts'
- time, and has the potential for many abuses such as failure to obtain
- informed consent and breeches of confidentiality. The value of a DDR in
- improving the safety of the blood supply has not been established. An
- analysis of the value of thse DDRs should be conducted, and based on the
- results, DDRs should be either eliminated or refined into an appropriate
- system."
-
- See also: Grossman BJ. Springer KM. Blood donor deferral registries:
- highlights of a conference. Transfusion. 1992;32:868-72.
-
- ===============================================================================
-
- Section 4. Treatment options.
-
- Q4.1 General treatment information.
- Q4.2 AIDS and Opportunistic Infections.
- Q4.3 Guide to Social Security Benefits.
- Q4.4 What if you can't afford AZT?
- Q4.5 What about DNCB? (please contribute)
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 4.1. General treatment information.
-
- [This article was published in AIDSFILE, 1993 Sept, Vol. 7, No. 3, p. 1-3.
- (Copyright 1993 The Regents of the University of California). The
- Regents grant permission for material in AIDSFILE to be reprinted for use
- by nonprofit educational institutions for scholarly or instructional
- purposes only, provided that (1) the author and AIDSFILE are identified;
- (2) proper notice of the copyright appears on each copy; (3) copies are
- distributed at or below cost.]
-
- Review of Clinical Guidelines - Antiretroviral Therapy
- Paul A. Volberding, MD
-
- Introduction
-
- A number of new observations have been made recently concerning
- antiretroviral therapy for HIV infection. Although new data is always
- welcome, lately it seems to cause as much confusion as clarification.
- Caregivers for patients with HIV disease continue to recognize the
- established benefits of antiretroviral therapy, but new uncertainties have
- been introduced. These uncertainties mean that we must consider the new
- information in order to make the best use of available treatments at the
- same time that we appreciate their limitations. Those who care for
- patients with HIV disease also anticipate the introduction of new classes
- of drugs, and we are beginning to determine how we might use these
- additional agents in our patient care.
-
- Review of Clinical Guidelines
-
- Antiretroviral therapy clearly has shown activity in delaying the
- progression and death of patients with HIV infection, especially when
- therapy has been tested in patients with more advanced disease. But even
- in asymptomatic HIV infection there is a general agreement of at least a
- transient clinical benefit from the use of nucleoside analog therapy.
- It is clear also that antiretroviral therapy improves various laboratory
- markers of the disease, including immunologic and virologic disease
- markers, such as CD4 cell counts and HIV p24 antigen levels. Further
- evidence of the clinical activity of these drugs comes from trials showing
- a second period of benefit when therapy is changed to a
- non-cross-resistant agent, for example, switching from zidovudine to ddI.
- In addition, we are encouraged by symptomatic improvement in patients with
- advanced disease who are started on antiretroviral drugs. Also, many
- retrospective epidemiology studies continue to show a survival advantage
- in patients taking these drugs. Despite continuing agreement on some
- of the benefits of antiretroviral therapy, we also face growing
- uncertainties. Recent studies have shown no survival advantage when
- antiretroviral drugs are used in asymptomatic HIV infection, and any
- benefit in slowing clinical progression seems to disappear when zidovudine
- monotherapy, at least, is given for a prolonged period. Questions
- continue as well about the degree of benefit of antiretroviral therapy for
- patients with advanced HIV disease. Early clinical trials of zidovudine,
- for example, were done before the routine used of PCP prophylaxis, which,
- by itself, delays progression to that common indicator of AIDS.
- Questions about the current status of antiretroviral therapy include:
- Which drug or combination is superior as initial therapy? When should this
- initial therapy begin? What is the duration of the benefit from initial
- therapy? How long should it be continued before other drugs or
- combinations are initiated? Finally it is important to consider: Which
- drugs should be used following initial therapy? What might we anticipate
- in the future from drugs in current clinical development?
-
- Beginning Therapy -- What and When
-
- Probably the easiest question at the moment in the field of HIV
- therapy is which drug to use to begin treatment. Data from ACTG 116A make
- it clear that zidovudine is superior to ddI as a monotherapy in previously
- untreated patients, and data from other studies show the superiority of
- zidovudine over ddC. An independent "State of the Art Panel" recently
- convened by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
- (NIAID) and chaired by Merle Sande, MD, UCSF chief of the medical service
- at San Francisco General Hospital, found an easy consensus that zidovudine
- monotherapy is the initial therapy of choice. Even here, however,
- other opinions may be heard, especially concerning the potential for
- initial use of combinations of nucleoside analogs. For example, the
- recent ACTG 155 trial in much more advanced disease tended to show a
- superiority of the combination of zidovudine and ddC, which was limited to
- patients with the highest CD4 cells (between 150 and 300). A large study,
- ACTG 175, is comparing initial combination with monotherapy, but the
- results from this trial are not anticipated before the end of 1995. In
- the meantime, combinations including zidovudine with ddI or zidovudine
- with ddC as initial therapy remain of interest. When best to
- initiate antiretroviral therapy is probably the most controversial
- question in the field of HIV management. Extended data from ACTG 019
- demonstrate durable clinical progression benefit with the use of 500 mg of
- zidovudine daily in patients with asymptomatic HIV infection and with CD4
- cell counts between 300 and 500, but these data are in apparent conflict
- with those from the recently completed Concorde Study. Concorde,
- enrolling more than 1700 patients with any level of CD4 count, compared
- the initial use of one gram of zidovudine daily with the same therapy
- deferred until after the person developed AIDS or ARC. After a
- median treatment duration of three years, and despite a clear and
- sustained CD4 improvement with the immediate use of zidovudine, there was
- no apparent benefit in the immediate treatment group either in clinical
- progression or survival. When the investigators analyzed a subset of the
- overall group with CD4 counts below 500 cells and after one year of
- therapy, a benefit similar to that seen in ACTG 019 was observed.
- Although Concorde was a powerful study, given the size and duration of
- follow-up, concerns have been raised that the dosage at one gram was
- excessively high and that the large number of patients allowed to begin
- therapy before they became symptomatic complicates the analysis. Also
- adding to the confusion are the recently published results of the
- European-Australian cooperative Group trial, which tended to find a
- clinical benefit with the use of zidovudine in patients with CD4 counts up
- to 750 cells. The State of the Art Panel recommended two broad
- options after considering the available data--initiating therapy in
- asymptomatic individuals with CD4 counts under 500 cells, or delaying this
- therapy until symptomatic HIV disease intervened. Another option favored
- by many clinicians is to follow patients, delaying therapy until evidence
- of more rapid disease progression becomes apparent as manifested by rapid
- declines in CD4 count or by a rise in p24 antigen or, especially, a rise
- in beta-2 microglobulin. At any rate, the clinician must discuss the
- various options with each patient, individualizing this decision according
- to the clinical and laboratory status of the patient and according to the
- patient's own desires.
-
- Duration of Therapy
-
- A second difficult question in the field of HIV management is how
- long to continue initial zidovudine. Again, the ACTG 019 experience would
- suggest that zidovudine monotherapy has a prolonged period of benefit,
- especially in patients with higher CD4 cell counts (300-500) when therapy
- is begun. On the other hand, ACTG 116A seemed to indicate that the
- initial superiority of zidovudine was lost after as little as two to four
- months of treatment with this drug prior to treatment with didanosine.
- Here again, the State of the Art panel could find little room for
- consensus. When therapy is begun in individuals with CD4 counts above
- 300, the panel suggested that it should be continued until the CD4 cell
- count fell below 300. When zidovudine monotherapy is begun in patients
- with CD4 counts under 300, the additional option of switching to ddI
- monotherapy after a fixed interval was raised, but again this interval was
- not defined. Once zidovudine monotherapy has been used, and when it
- is no longer felt to be effective for an individual, secondary therapy
- must be initiated. The choice of this therapy, however, is also
- uncertain. In moderate disease, with CD4 cell counts below 300, switching
- to ddI was superior to continuing with zidovudine in ACTG trials 116a and
- 116b/117, while switching to ddC was not of benefit in ACTG 155. On the
- other hand, from data gathered in CPCRA Trial 002, in patients with more
- advanced disease, ddI and ddC were equivalent in secondary treatment of
- patients previously treated with zidovudine who had progressed despite
- taking that drug or who were intolerant of zidovudine toxicity. In fact,
- ddC had a slight but significant superiority compared to ddI in terms of
- survival in this trial. It was hoped that combination therapy
- following zidovudine would be beneficial but questions have been raised
- following the results of ACTG 155. In this study, patients previously
- treated with zidovudine with CD4 cells below 300 were randomized to stay
- on zidovudine, start ddC monotherapy, or begin zidovudine and ddC
- combination therapy. Overall, there was no difference in clinical
- progression or survival among the three study arms. When the baseline CD4
- counts are examined, however, it was found that combination therapy was
- superior in patients with higher CD4 cell counts, especially between 150
- and 300. Therefore, it might seem advisable not to delay the introduction
- of combination therapy until patients have very advanced disease but
- rather to use such therapy earlier in the disease course. Whether
- zidovudine and ddI would be as good as zidovudine and ddC has not been
- investigated.
-
- Newer Classes of Drugs
-
- Along with new data on existing therapies, more information is
- available now on newer classes of drugs. These include nucleoside
- analogs, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, protease
- inhibitors, and the tat inhibitor.
-
- Nucleoside Analogs. New nucleoside analogs in clinical investigation
- include d4T (stavudine) and 3TC. d4T has been much more extensively
- studied and appears effective in raising CD4 count and lowering HIV p24
- antigen in a number of Phase 1 trials. It appears safe. Although cases
- of pancreatitis have been reported, they seem to be extremely rare.
- Neuropathy is the main toxicity but, again, it appears to be somewhat less
- than with ddI or ddC. d4T may not be suitable for combination with
- zidovudine as the two drugs have a negative interaction limiting their
- activation within the cell. On the other hand, d4T is a well-tolerated
- drug and may prove to be an alternative to one or more of the existing
- nucleosides. 3TC also appear safe and may be able to help restore
- sensitivity to zidovudine when the patient's HIV has become resistant.
-
- Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors. The non-nucleoside reverse
- transcriptase inhibitors, including nevirapine and the Merck "L" drug,
- were recently thought to have limited value because they induce high-level
- drug resistance so rapidly. At the Berlin conference, however, one report
- showed that by increasing the dosage of nevirapine to 400 mg daily, a dose
- well above the level of resistance, prolonged benefit might be achieved.
- Also, it was shown that combining zidovudine with nevirapine delays the
- onset of nevirapine resistance. Thus, these drugs may still find a place
- in clinical medicine. At the same time, convergent therapy, using
- three drugs together, was disappointing because of simultaneous resistance
- to zidovudine, ddI and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors.
-
- Protease Inhibitors. Protease inhibitors seem to be gaining some ground.
- In Phase 1 trials, several of these compounds have evident antiretroviral
- activity, which was reflected in decreasing HIV p24 and increasing CD4
- cell counts. Clinical benefits have not been established nor has the
- activity of these drugs used in combination with zidovudine been
- described. Because several structurally different protease inhibitors are
- being developed by different drug companies, it is hoped that at least one
- of these compounds will become more widely available soon for clinical
- use. Tat. While the protease inhibitors appear encouraging, tat
- inhibitors appear to be clinically inactive. In Phase 1 trials of the
- Hoffman LaRoche tat inhibitor, little or no antiretroviral activity was
- seen and it is probably that this class of drugs will not be developed
- further.
-
- Summary
-
- Given this complex and seemingly confusing information, what
- recommendations can be given to the clinician? Most important is to
- individualize the decision-making and to consider the desires of the
- patient even more than previously. Some patients gravitate easily to more
- aggressive therapy, while others prefer a more conservative therapeutic
- approach. With the former, initiating therapy at or even above 500 CD4
- counts, perhaps even with a combination of zidovudine and ddI, may be
- considered. For more conservative patients, however, following the
- recommendations of the Concorde study may in order. In other words, defer
- the initiation of zidovudine monotherapy until the onset of clinical
- symptoms. Once the choice of initial therapy has been made, all
- other recommendations must also be individualized. No firm data are
- available to guide the decision about how long to continue a therapy or
- even about what to use next. Most of these options have not been compared
- directly in clinical trials. It would seem advisable to continue therapy
- longer in patients with relatively earlier disease when therapy is
- initiated. On the other hand, if patients have more advanced disease, for
- example, are symptomatic or have CD4 cell counts below 300 when therapy is
- begun, then a more rapid alteration of therapy to a non-cross-resistant
- drug or combination should be considered. The goal in each patient is to
- continue effective antiretroviral therapy for as long as possible,
- discontinuing the therapy if further benefits appear impossible.
- Although the results of recent clinical trials are disappointing in some
- respects, it nevertheless is important to have these data. Only then can
- we adjust our expectations and our patients' expectations of
- antiretroviral treatment and learn how to make the best use of the drugs
- that we have available. Recognizing the increasing need for the
- development of new classes of more effective drugs in combinations, we
- must still seek to maintain the optimism that enables progress in our
- patients' care.
-
- Dr. Volberding is a UC San Francisco professor of medicine and
- Director, UCSF AIDS Program at San Francisco General Hospital.
-
- References: ZDV and The AIDS Clinical Trials Group (1989-93):
-
- Aweeka FT. Gambertoglio JG. et al. Pharmacokinetics of concomitantly
- administered foscarnet and zidovudine for treatment of human
- immunodeficiency virus infection (AIDS Clinical Trials Group protocol
- 053). Antimicrobial Agents & Chemotherapy. 36(8):1773-8, 1992 Aug.
-
- Fischl MA. Richman DD. et al. The safety and efficacy of zidovudine
- (AZT) in the treatment of subjects with mildly symptomatic human
- immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV) infection. A double-blind,
- placebo-controlled trial. The AIDS Clinical Trials Group [see comments].
- Annals of Internal Medicine. 112(10):727-37, 1990 May 15. [Editor's Note:
- This article reports the results of ACTG 106.]
-
- Fischl MA. Parker CB. et al. A randomized controlled trial of a reduced
- daily dose of zidovudine in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency
- syndrome. The AIDS Clinical Trials Group. New England Journal of
- Medicine. 323(15): 1009-14, 1990 Oct 11.
-
- Gelber RD. Lenderking WR. et al. Quality-of-life evaluation in a
- clinical trial of zidovudine therapy in patients with mildly symptomatic
- HIV infection. The AIDS Clinical Trials Group. Annals of Internal
- Medicine. 116(12 Pt 1):961-6, 1992 Jun 15.
-
- Hochster H. Dieterich D. et al. Toxicity of combined ganciclovir and
- zidovudine for cytomegalovirus disease associated with AIDS. An AIDS
- Clinical Trials Group Study. Annals of Internal Medicine. 113(2):111-7,
- 1990 Jul 15.
-
- Kahn JO. Lagakos SW. et al. A controlled trial comparing continued
- zidovudine with didanosine in human immunodeficiency virus infection. The
- NIAID AIDS Clinical Trials Group [see comments]. New England Journal of
- Medicine. 327(9):581-7, 1992 Aug 27.
-
- Koch MA. Volberding PA. et al. Toxic effects of zidovudine in
- asymptomatic human immunodeficiency virus-infected individuals with CD4+
- cell counts of 0.50 x 10(9)/L or less. Detailed and updated results from
- protocol 019 of the AIDS Clinical Trials Group. Archives of Internal
- Medicine. 152(11):2286-92, 1992 Nov.
-
- Krogstad DJ. Eveland MR. et al. Drug level monitoring in a double-blind
- multicenter trial: false-positive zidovudine measurements in AIDS clinical
- trials group protocol 019. Antimicrobial Agents & Chemotherapy. 35(6):
- 1160-4, 1991 Jun.
-
- Meng TC. Fischl MA. Richman DD. AIDS Clinical Trials Group: phase I/II
- study of combination 2',3'-dideoxycytidine and zidovudine in patients with
- acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and advanced AIDS-related
- complex. American Journal of Medicine. 88(5B):27S-30S, 1990 May 21.
-
- Sidtis JJ. Gatsonis C. et al. Zidovudine treatment of the AIDS dementia
- complex: results of a placebo-controlled trial. AIDS Clinical Trials
- Group. Annals of Neurology. 33(4):343-9, 1993 Apr.
-
- Sperling RS. Stratton P. Treatment options for human immunodeficiency
- virus-infected pregnant women. Obstetric- Gynecologic Working Group of the
- AIDS Clinical Trials Group of the National Institute of Allergy and
- Infectious Diseases. Obstetrics & Gynecology. 79(3):443-8, 1992 Mar.
-
- Volberding PA. Lagakos SW. et al. Zidovudine in asymptomatic human
- immunodeficiency virus infection. A controlled trial in persons with fewer
- than 500 CD4-positive cells per cubic millimeter. The AIDS Clinical Trials
- Group of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [see
- comments]. New England Journal of Medicine. 322(14):941-9, 1990 Apr 5.
- [Editor's Note: This article reports the results of ACTG 109.]
-
- See also:
-
- Aboulker JP. Swart AM. Preliminary analysis of the Concorde trial.
- Concorde Coordinating Committee [letter]. Lancet. 1993 Apr
- 3;341(8849):889-90. Comment in: Lancet 1993 Apr 17;341(8851): 1022-3;
- Lancet 1993 Apr 17;341(8851):1023; Lancet 1993 May 15; 341(8855):1276;
- Lancet 1993 May 15;341 (8855):1276-7; and Lancet 1993 May
- 15;341(8855):1277.
-
- Cooper DA. Gatell M. et al. Zidovudine in persons with asymptomatic HIV
- infection and CD4+ cell counts greater than 400 per cubic millimeter. New
- England Journal of Medicine. 329(5): 297-303, 1993 Jul 29.
-
- Hamilton JD. Hartigan PM. et al. A controlled trial of early versus
- late treatment with zidovudine in symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus
- infection. Results of the Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study. New
- England Journal of Medicine. 326(7):437- 43, 1992 Feb 13.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 4.2. AIDS and Opportunistic Infections.
-
- AIDS and Opportunistic Infections
-
- NIAID BACKGROUNDER: Office of Communications, National Institute of
- Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda,
- Maryland 20892 - September 1993
-
- Opportunistic infections (OIs) cause most of the illnesses and deaths
- among people infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. The National
- Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) leads the way in U.S.
- research on these life-threatening infections. As part of the NIAID
- effort, investigators are defining the optimal therapies, alone and in
- combination, to prevent and treat OIs. They seek ways to identify
- infections earlier and recognize resistance to therapies more quickly.
-
- What are OIs?
-
- The immune systems of most people with HIV gradually deteriorate, leaving
- them vulnerable to numerous viruses, fungi, bacteria and protozoa that are
- held in check in people with healthy immune systems. These microbes can
- become active in HIV-infected individuals, causing frequent and severe
- disease.
-
- NIAID uses a two-pronged approach to the prevention and treatment of OIs:
- basic laboratory research to learn how these microbes cause disease and
- clinical research to develop and evaluate promising therapies.
-
- Prevention and treatment of one such disease, Pneumocystis carinii
- pneumonia or PCP, has been a major thrust of the NIAID program. Other
- NIAID investigations include cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection,
- Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) and tuberculosis (TB). Institute
- research focuses on these infections because, although they occur
- repeatedly among HIV-infected people, they are rare in the general
- population and few drugs are available now to prevent and treat them.
-
- PCP: The Most Common OI
-
- PCP remains the most common, life-threatening opportunistic infection in
- people with HIV, occurring in up to 80 percent of individuals who do not
- take preventive therapy.
-
- The PCP organism, a microscopic parasite, appears to infect most people
- during childhood. In people with healthy immune systems, the parasite
- normally remains dormant, but it may cause disease in those with damaged
- immune systems.
-
- PCP infection is characterized by a dry cough and shortness of breath.
- Individuals may experience other, less specific symptoms such as fever,
- fatigue and weight loss for weeks or even months before respiratory
- problems appear. As PCP infection progresses, the functioning lung tissue
- becomes clogged, which decreases the transport of oxygen from the inhaled
- air into the blood. At this point, the oxygen in the blood may be lowered
- to dangerous or even fatal levels.
-
- Without treatment, close to 100 percent of HIV-infected patients with PCP
- die. During the 1980s, the development of effective therapies led to
- better management of PCP. Drugs for preventing and treating PCP include
- aerosolized pentamidine and oral trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP/SMX),
- but both can result in serious side effects that prevent some patients
- from taking the drugs.
-
- TMP/SMX is recommended more often than aerosolized pentamidine for
- treating and preventing PCP because the combination is effective,
- tolerated by about half of the patients who take it and may work against
- other disease-causing organisms as well. In 1992, an NIAID-supported
- trial proved that TMP/SMX is better than aerosolized pentamidine at
- preventing a second episode of PCP in people with AIDS who can tolerate
- either therapy.
-
- Although definitive research data are lacking, other agents may be
- considered in situations in which neither TMP/SMX nor aerosolized
- pentamidine can be given. The drug atovaquone is approved for patients
- with mild to moderate PCP who cannot tolerate TMP/SMX. One NIAID study
- showed that primaquine, an antimalaria drug, with clindamycin is an
- effective oral therapy for PCP. TMP with dapsone is an alternative
- treatment.
-
- The search for new, more effective, less toxic drugs and combinations of
- drugs to fight PCP continues. NIAID studies play an important role in
- this effort. One trial compares three drug regimens--TMP/dapsone,
- primaquine/clindamycin and TMP/SMX--for oral treatment of mild to moderate
- PCP. Another protocol looks at an 8-aminoquinoline, an antimalaria drug,
- while a third trial considers two regimens of TMP/SMX to prevent PCP.
-
- CMV: A Herpesvirus
-
- Infection with CMV, a virus in the herpes family, may occur throughout
- life. By age 50, about half of the general population has been exposed to
- this virus, yet most people do not become ill. After the original
- infection, the virus may lie dormant and reactivate itself if the immune
- system becomes suppressed.
-
- For people with HIV infection, CMV is one of the most frequent and serious
- OIs they face. CMV retinitis, an inflammation of the light-sensitive
- inner layer of the eye, is the most common CMV infection and leads to
- blindness if left untreated. Infections also may occur in the
- gastrointestinal tract, lungs, brain, heart and other organs.
-
- Both intravenous ganciclovir and foscarnet are approved to treat CMV
- retinitis. Lifelong maintenance on either treatment is required because
- the drugs do not kill CMV, they merely slow down its ability to grow.
- Even with therapy, the rate of relapse is high.
-
- NIAID studies of CMV and other herpesviruses have shown that intravenous
- foscarnet and ganciclovir are equally effective for CMV retinitis,
- although foscarnet was associated with increased survival for patients in
- the study. An ongoing trial is testing an oral form of ganciclovir to
- prevent CMV disease. The oral form of the drug would be much easier and
- safer for patients to take.
-
- MAC: A Bacterial OI
-
- Infection with MAC is diagnosed in up to 40 percent of people with AIDS in
- the United States, making it the most common bacterial OI. Usually, it
- affects people in advanced stages of HIV disease when the immune system is
- severely suppressed.
-
- The MAC organism is found widely in the environment and is thought to be
- acquired most commonly through the mouth or gastrointestinal tract. It
- can spread to the lungs, liver, spleen, lymph nodes, bone marrow,
- intestines and blood. MAC causes chronic debilitating symptoms--fever,
- night sweats, weight loss, fatigue, chronic diarrhea, abdominal pain,
- liver dysfunction and severe anemia.
-
- Rifabutin is the first drug to be approved for preventing MAC disease in
- people with advanced HIV infection. The Food and Drug administration
- based this approval on clinical studies showing that patients who received
- rifabutin were one-third to one-half as likely to develop MAC as were
- patients who received placebo.
-
- To prevent MAC disease, a U.S. Public Health Service Task Force on
- Prophylaxis and Therapy for MAC suggests that patients with HIV infection
- and fewer than 100 CD4 + T cells receive oral rifabutin for the rest of
- their lives unless disease develops. In the latter case, multiple drug
- treatment is needed. CD4+ T cells are immune system cells targeted and
- killed by HIV. No other drug regimen is recommended currently to prevent
- MAC. Azithromycin and clarithromycin are promising agents for prophylaxis,
- but studies of these agents have not been completed.
-
- Increasing evidence suggests that treatment can benefit patients with
- disseminated MAC, especially multiple-drug regimens including either
- clarithromycin or azithromycin. Therefore, the PHS task force suggests
- that all regimens, outside of a clinical trial, should consist of at least
- two drugs, including clarithromycin or azithromycin plus one other agent
- such as clofazimine, rifabutin, rifampin, ciprofloxacin and, in certain
- situations, amikacin. They recommend continued therapy for the patient's
- lifetime, as long as clinical benefit and reduction of mycobacteria are
- observed.
-
- NIAID has several studies under way looking at the roles of clarithromycin
- and azithromycin, and other drugs such as sparfloxacin, alone and in
- combination, to prevent and treat this serious disease.
-
- TB: An Airborne Disease
-
- TB, a chronic bacterial infection, causes more deaths worldwide than any
- other infectious disease. About one-third of the world's population
- harbors the predominant TB organism, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and is at
- risk for developing the disease. The World Health Organization (WHO)
- estimates that 4.4 million people worldwide are coinfected with TB and
- HIV. WHO predicts that by the year 2000, TB will take one million lives
- annually among the HIV-infected.
-
- Because of their weakened immune systems, people with HIV are vulnerable
- to reactivation of latent TB infections, as well as to new TB infections.
- Transmission of this disease occurs most commonly in crowded environments
- such as hospitals, prisons and shelters--where HIV-infected individuals
- make up a growing proportion of the population.
-
- Active TB may occur early in the course of HIV infection, often months or
- years before other OIs. TB most often affects the lungs, but it also can
- cause disease in other parts of the body, particularly in people with
- advanced HIV disease.
-
- Of particular concern for people with AIDS is multi-drug-resistant TB
- (MDR-TB). MDR-TB can occur when patients fail to take their TB medicine
- for the prolonged periods necessary to destroy all TB organisms, which
- then become resistant to the drugs. These resistant organisms can be
- spread to other people. Even with treatment, for individuals coinfected
- with HIV and MDR-TB, the death rate may be as high as 80 percent, as
- opposed to 40 to 60 percent for people with MDR-TB alone. The time from
- diagnosis to death may be only months for some patients with HIV and
- MDR-TB, as they are sometimes left without adequate treatment options.
-
- The initial site of TB infection is in the balloon-like sacs at the ends
- of the small air passages in the lungs. In these sacs, white blood cells
- called macrophages ingest the inhaled TB organism. Some of the organisms
- are killed immediately, while others remain and multiply within the
- macrophages. If the organism breaks out of the sacs, TB can become active
- disease. This spreading sometimes results in life-threatening meningitis
- and other problems.
-
- NIAID launched the first large U.S. study to assess TB treatment
- strategies for people coinfected with HIV and TB. The study is aimed at
- finding state-of-the-art treatment. NIAID is the lead institute for TB
- research at the National Institutes of Health, supporting more than 50
- research projects related to TB.
-
- Other OIs
-
- NIAID-supported scientists also study other OIs including fungal
- infections, herpes simplex virus infections, toxoplasmosis and
- cryptosporidium infections.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 4.3. Guide to Social Security Benefits.
-
- U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
- Social Security Administration
- SSA Publication No. 05-10020
- September 1993
-
- A Guide to Social Security and SSI Disability
- Benefits For People With HIV Infection
-
- About This Booklet
-
- Social Security can provide a lifeline of support to people with HIV
- infection. That lifeline comes in the form of monthly Social Security
- disability benefits and Supplemental Security Income payments, Medicare
- and Medicaid coverage, and a variety of other services available to people
- who receive disability benefits from Social Security.
-
- If you are disabled because of HIV infection, this booklet will help you
- understand the kinds of disability or Supplemental Security Income
- programs.
-
- What's Inside
-
- Part 1 -- Background Information The first section provides some brief
- background information about HIV infection and Social Security.
-
- Part 2 -- What Benefits Are You Eligible For? This section explains the
- nonmedical rules and eligibility factors for Social Security Disability
- Insurance benefits and Supplemental Security Income Disability payments.
-
- Part 3 -- How Does Social Security Define "Disability?" This section
- explains Social Security's definition of "disability" and how it relates
- to claimants with HIV infection.
-
- Part 4 -- How Does Social Security Evaluate Your Disability This section
- explains how Social Security evaluates disability claims involving HIV
- diseases in general. And it includes up-to- date information about the
- way we process claims, especially those involving women and children with
- HIV infection.
-
- Part 5 -- How Do You File For Disability Benefits? This section includes
- information about when and how to apply for disability, what steps we take
- to ensure that your claim is processed quickly and accurately, and most
- important, what things you can do to help the process along. Also
- included is information about situations when we can presume a person is
- disabled and make immediate payments.
-
- Part 6 -- Helping You Return To Work This section provides an overview of
- special rules designed to help you return to work.
-
- Part 7 -- What you Need To Know About Medicaid And Medicare This section
- includes a brief overview of the kinds of benefits available from the
- Medicaid and Medicare programs.
-
- For More Information
-
- ***************************************************************** PART 1
- -- BACKGROUND INFORMATION
-
- Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is characterized by the
- inability of the body's natural immunity to fight infection. It is caused
- by a retrovirus known as human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV. Generally
- speaking, people with HIV infection fall into two broad categories:
-
- 1) those with symptomatic HIV infection, including AIDS; and 2)
- those with HIV infection but no symptoms.
-
- Although thousands of people with HIV infection are receiving Social
- Security or Supplemental Security Income disability benefits, we believe
- there may be others who might be eligible for these benefits. Social
- Security is committed to helping all men, women, and children with HIV
- infection learn more about the disability programs we administer. And if
- you qualify for benefits, we are just as committed to ensuring that you
- receive them as soon as possible. You should also be aware that the
- Social Security Administrations's criteria for evaluating HIV infection
- are not linked to the Centers for Disease Control's (CDC) definition of
- AIDS. This is because the goals of the two agencies are different. CDC
- defines AIDS primarily for surveillance purposes, not for the evaluation
- of disability.
-
- PART 2 -- WHAT BENEFITS ARE YOU ELIGIBLE FOR?
-
- We pay disability benefits under two programs: Social Security Disability
- Insurance, sometimes referred to as SSDI, and Supplemental Security
- Income, often called SSI. The medical requirements are the same for both
- programs, and your disability is determined by the same process. However,
- there are major differences in the nonmedical factors, which are explained
- in the next two sections.
-
- Social Security Disability Insurance Benefits: The Nonmedical Rules Of
- Eligibility
-
- Here are examples of how people qualify for SSDI:
-
- o Most people qualify for Social Security disability by working,
- paying Social Security taxes, and in turn, earning "credits" toward
- eventual benefits. The maximum number of credits you can earn each
- year is 4. The number of credits you need to qualify for disability
- depends on your age when you become disabled. Nobody needs more than
- 40 credits and young people can qualify with as few as 6 credits.
-
- o Disabled widows and widowers age 50 or older could be eligible
- for a disability benefit on the Social Security record of a deceased
- spouse.
-
- o Disabled children age 18 or older could be eligible for
- dependent's benefits on the Social Security record of a parent who is
- getting retirement or disability benefits, or on the record of a
- parent who has died. (The disability must have started before age
- 22.)
-
- o Children under the age of 18 qualify for dependents benefits on
- the record of a parent who is getting retirement or disability
- benefits, or on the record of a parent who has died, merely because
- they are under age 18.
-
- For more information about Social Security disability benefits in
- general, ask Social Security for a copy of the booklet, Disability
- (Publication No. 05-10029).
-
- How Much Will Your Benefits Be?
-
- How much your Social Security benefit will be depends on your earnings
- history. Generally, higher earnings translate into higher Social Security
- benefits. You can find out how much you will get by contacting Social
- Security and asking for an estimate of your benefits. We'll give you a
- form you can use to send for a free statement that contains a record of
- your earnings and an estimate of your benefits. In addition to
- checking your benefit, we encourage you to use this statement to verify
- that your earnings have been properly recorded in our files. It's
- important that you do this because any missing or unreported wages could
- lower your Social Security benefit or even prevent you from qualifying for
- disability benefits. If you find a problem, contact your local Social
- Security office right away, show them proof of your actual wages, and the
- record will be corrected. This can be particularly important for people
- who have tested positive for HIV but have not developed symptoms, so that
- any potential benefits will not be delayed by wage correction efforts.
- Disabled widows, widowers, and children eligible for benefits as a
- dependent on a spouse's or parent's Social Security record receive an
- amount that is a percentage of the worker's Social Security benefit.
-
- Supplemental Security Income: The Nonmedical Rules Of Eligibility
-
- SSI is a program that pays monthly benefits to people with low incomes and
- limited assets who are 65 or older, or blind, or disabled. As its
- name implies, "Supplemental" Security Income "supplements" a person's
- income up to a certain level that can go up every year based on
- cost-of-living adjustments. The level varies from one state to another,
- so check with your local Social Security office to find out more about SSI
- benefit levels in your state. We don't count all the income you have
- when we figure out if you qualify for SSI. And if you work, there are
- special rules we use for counting your wages. Again, check with Social
- Security to find out if you can get SSI. In addition to rules about
- income, people on SSI must have limited assets. Generally, individuals
- with assets under $2000, or couples with assets under $3000, can qualify
- for SSI. However, when we figure your assets, we don't count such items
- as your home, your car (unless it's an expensive one), and most of your
- personal belongings. Your Social Security office can tell you more
- about the income and asset limits. For more general information, ask for
- a copy of the booklet, SSI (Publication No. 05-11000).
-
- PART 3 -- HOW DOES SOCIAL SECURITY DEFINE DISABILITY?
-
- In this section, we'll explain the criteria you must meet in order to be
- considered "disabled." First, we'll explain in general terms how Social
- Security defines and determines disability. Then we'll discuss how it
- applies to people with HIV infection.
-
- The General Definition Of Disability
-
- Disability under Social Security is based on your inability to work
- because of a medical condition. You will be considered disabled if you
- are unable to do any kind of "substantial" work for which you are suited.
- (Usually, monthly earnings of $500 or more are considered substantial.)
- Your ability to work must be expected to last at least a year. Or, the
- condition that keeps you from working must be so severe that you are not
- expected to live. For children, we decide how the condition affects
- their ability to function--to do the things and behave in the ways that
- other children of the same age normally would.
-
- How This Definition Of Disability Applies To People With HIV Infection
-
- A person with symptomatic HIV infection is often severely limited in his
- or her ability to work. In other words, if the evidence shows that you
- have symptomatic HIV infection that severely limits your ability to work,
- and if you meet the other eligibility factors, the chances are very good
- that you will be able to receive Social Security or SSI Benefits. On
- the other hand, some people with HIV infection may be less impaired and
- able to work, so they may not be eligible for disability.
-
- PART 4 -- HOW DOES SOCIAL SECURITY EVALUATE YOUR DISABILITY?
-
- Social Security works with an agency in each state, usually called a
- Disability Determination Service (DDS), to evaluate disability claims. At
- the DDS, a disability evaluation specialist and a doctor follow a
- step-by-step process that applies to all disability claims, thus assuring
- a consistent approach to evaluating disability. First, the DDS
- specialists decide whether your impairment is "severe." This simply means
- the evidence must show that your disability interferes with your ability
- to work. The next step in the process is deciding whether the
- disability is included in a list of impairments. This list describes, for
- each of the major body systems, impairments that are considered severe
- enough to prevent an adult from doing any substantial work or in the case
- of children under the age of 18, impairments that are severe enough to
- prevent a child from functioning in a manner similar to other children of
- the same age. Recently we published a list of impairments for HIV
- infections. In this list, we have included many conditions associated
- with symptomatic HIV infection, including some that specifically apply to
- women and children with HIV infection (See next two sections). Some
- of the HIV-related conditions included in the HIV list of impairments are
- shown below. The level of severity that an impairment must meet to be
- found disabling are also specified in the regulations.
-
- o Pulmonary tuberculosis resistant to treatment
-
- o Kaposi's sarcoma
-
- o Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP)
-
- o Carcinoma of the cervix
-
- o Herpes Simplex
-
- o Hodgkin's disease and all lymphomas
-
- o HIV Wasting Syndrome
-
- o Syphilis and Neurosyphilis
-
- o Candidiasis
-
- o Histoplasmosis
-
- Remember: these are just a few examples. You can see a complete list
- of HIV-related impairments at any Social Security office. The complete
- list will also include the findings necessary for listed impairments to be
- considered disabling by Social Security. If you have symptoms of HIV
- infection that are not specifically included in (or equal in severity to)
- the impairments on our list, then DDS disability specialists will look at
- how frequently these conditions occur and how they affect your ability to
- function. The DDS team will evaluate how well you function in three
- general areas: daily activities; social functioning; and the ability to
- complete tasks in a timely manner, which requires the ability to maintain
- concentration, persistence, and pace. If you have "marked
- limitations" in any one of these functional areas and repeated
- manifestations of HIV meeting the criteria in the listings, you may be
- found disabled. A marked limitation is one that seriously interferes with
- your ability to function independently, appropriately, and effectively.
- It does not mean that you must be confined to bed, hospitalized, or in a
- nursing home. If the specialists decide that you are not disabled at this
- point because you do not have a condition that exactly matches or is equal
- in severity to one on our list, then they will look to see if your
- condition prevents you from doing the work you normally do. If it does
- not, then we look to see if it prevents you from doing any other type of
- work you're suited for, based on your age, education, and experience. If
- it does, you may still be found disabled. Remember, at all steps in
- the process, your impairment must be documented. Documentation includes
- medical records from your doctors, as well as laboratory test results,
- X-ray reports, etc. The HIV infection itself--that is, the presence of
- the virus--must be documented as well as any HIV-related manifestations.
- At all steps in the process it is important that we have evidence of
- signs, symptoms, and laboratory findings associated with HIV infection, as
- well as information on how well you are able to function day-to-day. The
- signs and symptoms may include: repeated infections; fevers/night sweats;
- enlarged lymph nodes, liver or spleen; lower energy or generalized
- weakness; dyspnea on exertion; persistent cough; depression/anxiety;
- headache; anorexia; nausea and vomiting; and side effects of medication
- and/or treatment, as well as how your treatment affects your daily
- activities.
-
- Evaluation Of HIV Infection In Women
-
- Statistics show that there is an increasing number of women with HIV
- diseases. Social Security's guidelines for the immune system recognize
- that HIV infection can show up differently in women than in men. In
- addition to following the criteria outlined in the previous section, DDS
- disability evaluators consider specific criteria for diseases common in
- women. These include: vulvovaginal candidiasis (yeast infection); genital
- herpes; pelvic inflammatory disease (PDI); invasive cervical cancer;
- genital ulcerative disease; and condyloma (genital warts caused by the
- human papillomavirus). Again, the level of severity necessary for these
- impairments to be considered disabling is included in the list of
- impairments.
-
- Evaluation Of HIV Infection In Children
-
- We also have separate listings for children with HIV infection. These
- guidelines recognize the fact that the course of the disease in children
- can differ from adults. As with adults, some children may not appear to
- have the conditions specified in the guidelines, or may have listed
- conditions that are not as severe as the guidelines require. When this
- happens, a functional assessment is made using criteria contained in the
- lists. A child may be disabled if the HIV-related impairments
- substantially reduce his/her ability to grow, develop, or engage in
- activities similar to children of the same age. For more information
- about disability benefits for children, ask Social Security for a copy of
- the booklet, Social Security And SSI Benefits For Children With
- Disabilities (Publication No. 05- 10026).
-
- PART 5 -- HOW DO YOU FILE FOR DISABILITY BENEFITS
-
- You apply for Social Security and SSI disability benefits by calling or
- visiting any Social Security office. All Social Security files are kept
- strictly confidential. It would help if you have certain documents with
- you when you apply. But don't delay filing because you don't have all the
- information you need. We'll help you get the rest of it after you sign
- up. The information you'll need may include:
-
- o your Social Security number and birth certificate;
-
- o the Social Security numbers and birth certificates for family members
- signing up on your record; and
-
- o a copy of your most recent W-2 form (or your tax return if you're
- self-employed).
-
- If you're signing up for SSI, you will need to provide records that
- show that your income and assets are below the SSI limits. This might
- include such things as bank statements, rent receipts, care registration,
- etc.
-
- You'll also need to give us information about how your condition affects
- your daily activities, the names and addresses of your doctors and clinics
- where you've received treatment, and a summary of the kind of work you've
- done in the last 15 years. If you have medical evidence such as reports
- of blood tests, laboratory work, or a physical, it would be helpful if you
- brought them with you. In the section below (What You Can Do to Expedite
- the Processing of Your Claim), we give you some guidelines for providing
- us with medical and vocational information that will help speed up your
- claim. But first, we want you to know what Social Security does to make
- the process work as smoothly as possible.
-
- What Steps Has Social Security Taken To Ensure Prompt Processing And
- Payment Of Disability Benefits?
-
- All HIV infection claims are given prompt attention and priority handling.
- For many people applying for SSI with a medical diagnosis of symptomatic
- HIV infection, the law allows us to PRESUME they are disabled. This
- permits us to pay up to 6 months of benefits pending a final decision on
- the claim. You will qualify for this immediate payment if:
-
- o a medical source confirms that the HIV infection is severe enough to
- meet SSA's criteria;
-
- o you meet the other SSI nonmedical eligibility requirements; and
-
- o you are not doing "substantial" work (See section, "The General
- Definition of Disability" in Part 3).
-
- If you have symptomatic HIV infection but the local Social Security
- office cannot provide immediate payment, a disability evaluation
- specialist at the DDS may still make a "presumptive" disability decision
- at any point in the process where the evidence suggests a high likelihood
- that your claim will be approved. (If we later decide you are not
- disabled, you will NOT have to pay back the money you received.)
-
- Special arrangements have been made with a number of AIDS service
- organizations, advocacy groups, and medical facilities to help us get the
- evidence we need to streamline the claims process. And many DDS's have
- Medical/Professional Relations Officers who work directly with these
- organizations to make this process work smoothly.
-
- What You Can Do To Expedite The Processing Of Your Claim
-
- You can play an active and important role in ensuring that your claim is
- processed accurately and quickly. The best advice we can give you is to
- keep thorough records that document the symptoms of your illness and how
- it affects your daily activities, and then to provide all of this
- information to Social Security when you file your claim. Below are some
- guidelines you can follow:
-
- o Document the symptoms of your illness early and often
-
- Use a calendar to jot down brief notes about how you feel on each day.
- Record any of your usual activities you could not do on any given day. Be
- specific. And don't forget to include any psychological or mental
- problems.
-
- o Help your doctor help you
-
- Not all doctors may be aware of all the kinds of information we need to
- document your disability. Ask your doctor or other health care
- professional to track the course of your symptoms in detail over time and
- to keep a thorough record of any evidence of fatigue, depression,
- forgetfulness, dizziness, and other hard-to-document symptoms.
-
- o Keep records of how your illness affected you on the job
-
- If you were working, but lost your job because of your illness, make notes
- that describe what it is about your condition that forced you to stop
- working.
-
- o Give us copies of all these records when you file
-
- In addition to these records, be sure to list the names, addresses, and
- phone numbers of all the doctors, clinics, and hospitals you have been to
- since your illness began. Include your patient or treatment
- identification number if you know it. Also include the names, addresses,
- and phone numbers of any other people who have information about your
- illness.
-
- PART 6 -- HELPING YOU RETURN TO WORK
-
- If you return to work, Social Security has a number of special rules,
- called "work incentives," that provide cash benefits and continued
- Medicare or Medicaid coverage while you work. They are particularly
- important to people with HIV disease who, because of the recurrent nature
- of HIV-related illnesses, may be able to return to work following periods
- o disability.
-
- The rules are different for Social Security and SSI beneficiaries.
- For people getting Social Security disability benefits, they include a
- 9-month "trial work period" during which earnings, no matter how much,
- will not affect benefit payments; and a 3-year guarantee that, if benefits
- have stopped because a person remains employed after the trial work
- period, a Social Security check will be paid for any month earnings are
- below the "substantial" level (generally $500). In addition, Medicare
- coverage extends through the 3-year timeframe after the trial work period,
- even if your earnings are substantial.
-
- SSI work incentives include continuation of Medicaid coverage even if
- earnings are too high for SSI payments to be made, help with setting up a
- "plan to achieve self-support" (PASS), and special consideration for pay
- received in a sheltered workshop so that SSI benefits may continue even
- though the earnings might normally prevent payments.
-
- These and other work incentives are explained in detail in the
- publication, Working While Disabled...How Social Security Can Help
- (Publication No. 05-10095). For a free copy, just call or visit your
- nearest Social Security office.
-
- PART 7 -- WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT MEDICAID AND MEDICARE
-
- Medicaid and Medicare are our country's two major government-run health
- insurance programs. Generally, people on SSI and other people with low
- incomes qualify for Medicaid, while Medicare coverage is earned by working
- in jobs covered by Social Security, for a railroad, or for the federal
- government. Many people qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid.
-
- Medicaid Coverage
-
- In most states, Social Security's decision that you are eligible for SSI
- also makes you eligible for Medicaid coverage. (Check with your local
- Social Security or Medicaid office to verify the requirements in your
- state.)
-
- State Medicaid programs are required to cover certain services,
- including inpatient and outpatient hospital care and physician services.
- States have the option to include other services, such as intermediate
- care, hospice care, private duty nursing, and prescribed drugs.
-
- For more information about Medicaid, contact your local Medicaid
- agency.
-
- Medicare Coverage
-
- If you get Social Security disability, you will qualify for Medicare
- coverage 24 months after the month you became entitled to those benefits.
- Medicare helps pay for:
-
- o inpatient and outpatient hospital care;
-
- o doctor's services;
-
- o diagnostic tests;
-
- o skilled nursing care;
-
- o home health visits;
-
- o hospice care; and
-
- o other medical services.
-
- For more information about Medicare, call or visit your local Social
- Security office to ask for the booklet Medicare (Publication No.
- 05-10043).
-
- FOR MORE INFORMATION
-
- For more information or to apply for benefits, call or visit Social
- Security. It's easiest to call Social Security's toll-free telephone
- number. The number is 1-800-772-1213. You can speak to a representative
- 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. each business day. The best times to call are early in
- the morning, early in the evening, late in the week, and toward the end of
- the month.
-
- The Social Security Administration treats all calls
- confidentially--whether they're made to our toll-free numbers or to one of
- our local offices. We also want to ensure that you receive accurate and
- courteous service. That's why we have a second Social Security
- representative monitor some incoming and outgoing telephone calls.
-
- Note from the AIDS Information Center: This document reflects changes in
- Social Security rules that took effect on July 2, 1993 and, also, how SSA
- evaluates claims based on HIV/AIDS. Copies of this publication, available
- in English and Spanish, can be ordered through Social Security's toll-free
- number, 1-800-772-1213. The publication numbers are 05-10020 (English)
- and 05-10920 (Spanish). For bulk quantities call the Public Information
- Distribution Center at (410) 965-0945. The fax number for ordering
- publications is (410) 965-0696.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 4.4. What if you can't afford AZT?
-
- PATIENT ASSISTANCE PROGRAM AT BURROUGHS WELLCOME
-
- The Burroughs Wellcome Company has announced changes in its Patient
- Assistance Program (PAP) to make access to its drugs easier for
- disadvantaged patients. Physicians can now call a toll-free number, once
- they have determined that a patient is in need, to receive authorization
- to enroll the patient in the program. Upon authorization, the physician
- will give the patient a prescription benefit card from PCS Health Systems
- that can be used at any pharmacy.
-
- To qualify, patients must meet the following guidelines:
-
- o be a resident of the United States or its territories;
-
- o be financially disadvantaged;
-
- o have applied for and be awaiting reply from other prescription funding
- sources; or
-
- o not qualify for private or government assistance.
-
- The primary patient groups expected to participate are those using
- Burroughs Wellcome products for HIV and related infections, those with
- herpesvirus infections, transplant recipients, and those with cancer or
- congestive heart failure.
-
- Enrollment in the PAP must be initiated by a physician. To find out
- if an individual is eligible, patients should have their physicians call
- (800) 722-9294.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Question 4.5. What about DNCB? (please contribute)
-
- (please contribute to this FAQ)
-
-