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Missed opportunities: refusal to confirm reactive rapid HIV tests in the emergency department.


ABSTRACT:

Background

HIV infection remains a major US public health concern. While HIV-infected individuals now benefit from earlier diagnosis and improved treatment options, progress is tempered by large numbers of newly diagnosed patients who are lost to follow-up prior to disease confirmation and linkage to care.

Methodology

In the randomized, controlled USHER trial, we offered rapid HIV tests to patients presenting to a Boston, MA emergency department. Separate written informed consent was required for confirmatory testing. In a secondary analysis, we compared participants with reactive results who did and did not complete confirmatory testing to identify factors associated with refusal to complete the confirmation protocol.

Principal findings

Thirteen of 62 (21.0%, 95% CI (11.7%, 33.2%)) participants with reactive rapid HIV tests refused confirmation; women, younger participants, African Americans, and those with fewer HIV risks, with lower income, and without primary care doctors were more likely to refuse. We projected that up to four true HIV cases were lost at the confirmation stage.

Conclusions

These findings underscore the need to better understand the factors associated with refusal to confirm reactive HIV testing and to identify interventions that will facilitate confirmatory testing and linkage to care among these populations.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00502944; NCT01258582.

SUBMITTER: Ganguli I 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3540076 | biostudies-literature | 2013

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Missed opportunities: refusal to confirm reactive rapid HIV tests in the emergency department.

Ganguli Ishani I   Collins Jamie E JE   Reichmann William M WM   Losina Elena E   Katz Jeffrey N JN   Arbelaez Christian C   Donnell-Fink Laurel A LA   Walensky Rochelle P RP  

PloS one 20130108 1


<h4>Background</h4>HIV infection remains a major US public health concern. While HIV-infected individuals now benefit from earlier diagnosis and improved treatment options, progress is tempered by large numbers of newly diagnosed patients who are lost to follow-up prior to disease confirmation and linkage to care.<h4>Methodology</h4>In the randomized, controlled USHER trial, we offered rapid HIV tests to patients presenting to a Boston, MA emergency department. Separate written informed consent  ...[more]

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