Literature DB >> 17301567

HIV incidence during a cluster-randomized trial of two strategies providing voluntary counselling and testing at the workplace, Zimbabwe.

Elizabeth L Corbett1, Beauty Makamure, Yin Bun Cheung, Ethel Dauya, Ronnie Matambo, Tsitsi Bandason, Shungu S Munyati, Peter R Mason, Anthony E Butterworth, Richard J Hayes.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate HIV incidence during a trial of two voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) strategies. Counselling may promote beneficial behavioural change, although knowledge of negative status does not appear to contribute further benefit.
DESIGN: The parent cluster-randomized trial demonstrated much greater uptake of VCT when counselling and rapid testing were available on-site (intensive VCT) than through pre-paid vouchers to an external provider (standard VCT). Anonymous HIV tests had been requested from all employees at enrolment and after 2 years intervention.
METHODS: The study setting was 22 businesses in Harare, Zimbabwe. Participants were 3146 HIV-negative individuals remaining in employment at the end of intervention, of whom 2966 (94.3%) consented to repeat testing. VCT linked to basic HIV care was provided and the main outcome measures were HIV incidence under each study arm, as a retrospective secondary analysis.
RESULTS: Mean VCT uptake in this cohort was 70.7 and 5.2%, respectively, in the intensive and standard arms. Crude HIV incidence was 1.21 per 100 person-years, with non-significantly higher rates in the intensive VCT arm [mean site incidence 1.37 and 0.95 per 100 person-years, respectively; adjusted rate ratio 1.49 (95% confidence interval 0.79-2.80).
CONCLUSIONS: Highly acceptable VCT did not reduce HIV incidence in this predominantly male cohort. HIV incidence was highest in the high uptake VCT arm, lending support to a US trial in which rapid testing appeared to have adverse behavioural consequences in some HIV-negative clients. Careful comparison of outcomes under different counselling and testing strategies is needed to maximize HIV prevention from global scale-up of VCT.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17301567     DOI: 10.1097/QAD.0b013e3280115402

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS        ISSN: 0269-9370            Impact factor:   4.177


  40 in total

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Authors:  Simon Gregson; Elizabeth Gonese; Timothy B Hallett; Noah Taruberekera; John W Hargrove; Ben Lopman; Elizabeth L Corbett; Rob Dorrington; Sabada Dube; Karl Dehne; Owen Mugurungi
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9.  The impact of HIV testing on subjective expectations and risky behavior in Malawi.

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10.  Effects of a multicomponent intervention to streamline initiation of antiretroviral therapy in Africa: a stepped-wedge cluster-randomised trial.

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Journal:  Lancet HIV       Date:  2016-08-27       Impact factor: 12.767

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