the Institute of Development Studies and partner organisations
Browse
- No file added yet -

Test offering, not additional information, may increase HIV testing uptake in a knowledgeable population

Download (519.16 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-05, 23:25 authored by C. Lau, A.S. Muula, R. Kalanda, G. Horwitz, H. Misiri
Objectives: To evaluate patient HIV knowledge and testing experience and assess the effect of an HIV informational handout on HIV testing propensity. Design: Cross sectional, descriptive techniques were employed to assess demographics, HIV knowledge and HIV testing experience. A randomized controlled trial was performed to determine if an HIV/AIDS information sheet influenced testing propensity. Setting: Blantyre Adventist Hospital Outpatient Clinic. Subjects: Non-emergency patients over 18 years old attending during consulting hours. Interventions: All subjects answered a questionnaire. For the randomized controlled trial component, half received an HIV information handout. Main Outcome Measures: Proportions were calculated to evaluate testing experience. Logistic regression was used to assess impact of written information and demographics on HIV testing propensity. Results: 490 participants were recruited, of whom 57% had never been tested for HIV. Of the untested, 88% had never been offered an HIV test. Of those that had never been offered a test, 46% desired one. The sample was highly knowledgeable about HIV. Reading an information sheet had no impact on HIV knowledge (p=0.736 to 0.788) or desire for testing (p=0.387). However, age (OR=0.97,95%CI (0.95,0.99)) and gender (OR=1.85, 95%CI (1.06, 3.23)) significantly correlated with testing propensity. Conclusions: A large percentage of patients who have never been offered HIV testing desire testing. More frequent HIV test offering by clinicians could improve testing rates. Clinician education programmes should be developed to increase test offering. Furthermore, written health information in a setting of high HIV/AIDS knowledge may not change behaviour. Alternative methods should be employed to encourage HIV testing uptake.

A CAJM journal article.

History

Publisher

Central African Journal of Medicine (CAJM), University of Zimbabwe

Citation

Lau, C. et. al. (2004) Test offering, not additional information, may increase HIV testing uptake in a knowledgeable population, CAJM vol. 50, no. 9. Harare, Avondale: CAJM.

IDS Item Types

Article

Copyright holder

University of Zimbabwe

Country

Malawi.

Language

en

Identifier ISSN

0008-9176

Usage metrics

    University of Zimbabwe Social Sciences Research

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC