BACKGROUND: In 2006, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released new recommendations for routine HIV testing. Among these were recommendations that emergency departments (EDs) offer routine opt-out HIV screening to their patients. We established a screening program implementing these recommendations at an urban university hospital ED in Washington, DC. We report the results of this program. METHODS: During a 3-month period, ED patients being treated for a wide range of conditions were approached by trained HIV screeners and offered point-of-care rapid HIV testing. Patients with positive results were referred to hospital or community resources for confirmatory testing and treatment. RESULTS: During the program period, 14,986 patients were treated in the ED and 4151 (27.6%) were offered HIV screening. The mean patient age was 37.5 years; 48.5% were black, 39.0% were non-Hispanic white, 4.1% were Hispanic, 1.7% were Asian, and 6.7% responded as being other race. A total of 56.1% were female, and most lived within the Washington, DC metropolitan area. Of the patients offered HIV screening, 2476 (59.7%) accepted the test. Of the 26 patients with a preliminary positive screen, 13 were lost to follow-up, 9 were confirmed positive by Western blot, and 4 were confirmed negative by Western blot. Eight of the 9 patients with confirmed HIV infection were successfully linked to follow-up care. CONCLUSIONS: The implementation of the CDC recommendations establishing routine opt-out HIV screening programs in EDs is feasible. Further efforts to establish routine ED HIV testing are therefore warranted.
BACKGROUND: In 2006, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released new recommendations for routine HIV testing. Among these were recommendations that emergency departments (EDs) offer routine opt-out HIV screening to their patients. We established a screening program implementing these recommendations at an urban university hospital ED in Washington, DC. We report the results of this program. METHODS: During a 3-month period, ED patients being treated for a wide range of conditions were approached by trained HIV screeners and offered point-of-care rapid HIV testing. Patients with positive results were referred to hospital or community resources for confirmatory testing and treatment. RESULTS: During the program period, 14,986 patients were treated in the ED and 4151 (27.6%) were offered HIV screening. The mean patient age was 37.5 years; 48.5% were black, 39.0% were non-Hispanic white, 4.1% were Hispanic, 1.7% were Asian, and 6.7% responded as being other race. A total of 56.1% were female, and most lived within the Washington, DC metropolitan area. Of the patients offered HIV screening, 2476 (59.7%) accepted the test. Of the 26 patients with a preliminary positive screen, 13 were lost to follow-up, 9 were confirmed positive by Western blot, and 4 were confirmed negative by Western blot. Eight of the 9 patients with confirmed HIV infection were successfully linked to follow-up care. CONCLUSIONS: The implementation of the CDC recommendations establishing routine opt-out HIV screening programs in EDs is feasible. Further efforts to establish routine ED HIV testing are therefore warranted.
Authors: Monisha Arya; Lena Tionne Williams; Valerie E Stone; Heidi Louise Behforouz; Kasisomayajula Viswanath; Thomas Peter Giordano Journal: J Natl Med Assoc Date: 2010-12 Impact factor: 1.798
Authors: Roland C Merchant; Bethany M Catanzaro; George R Seage; Kenneth H Mayer; Melissa A Clark; Victor G Degruttola; Bruce M Becker Journal: J Med Screen Date: 2009 Impact factor: 2.136
Authors: Ronald J Lubelchek; Anna L Hotton; Daniel Taussig; David Amarathithada; Marisol Gonzalez Journal: J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr Date: 2013-11-01 Impact factor: 3.731
Authors: Jeremy Brown; Irene Kuo; Jennifer Bellows; Ryan Barry; Peter Bui; Joshua Wohlgemuth; Emily Wills; Nirav Parikh Journal: Public Health Rep Date: 2008 Nov-Dec Impact factor: 2.792
Authors: Roland C Merchant; George R Seage; Kenneth H Mayer; Melissa A Clark; Victor G DeGruttola; Bruce M Becker Journal: Public Health Rep Date: 2008 Nov-Dec Impact factor: 2.792
Authors: Michael S Lyons; Christopher J Lindsell; Jason S Haukoos; Gregory Almond; Jeremy Brown; Yvette Calderon; Eileen Couture; Roland C Merchant; Douglas A E White; Richard E Rothman; Chris Aldridge; Gregory Almond; Gregory Andrade; Christian Arbelaez; Tom-meka Archinard; Steven I Aronin; Susan Barrera; Moses Bateganya; Joanna Bell-Merriam; Bob Bongiovanni; Kathleen Brady; Bernard Branson; Carol Brosgart; Jeremy Brown; Evan Cadoff; Yvette Calderon; Linda Chaille-Arnold; Ben Cheng; William Chiang; Brittney Copeland; Rosalyn L Cousar; Eileen Couture; Maggie Czarnogorski; Kit Delgado; Emily Erbelding; James Feldman; Osvaldo Garcia; Charlotte A Gaydos; Nancy Glick; Barbara Gripshover; Jason Haukoos; Alisa Hayes; James Heffelfinger; Laura Herrera; Amy Hilley; David Holtgrave; Brooke Hoots; Emily Hopkins; Debra Houry; Debra Howell; Yu-Hsiang Hsieh; Angela B Hutchinson; Blanca Jackson; Michael Jaker; Kerin Jones; Juliana Jung; Linda Kampe; Virginia Kan; Nancy Kass; Gabor D Kelen; Karen Kroc; Ann Kurth; Margaret A Lampe; Jason Leider; Michael Lemanski; Christopher J Lindsell; Michael Lyons; Sandra McGovern; Seth Mercer; Roland Merchant; Nancy Miertschin; Joan Miller; Patricia Mitchell; Sarah Nelson; Linda Onaga; David Paltiel; Sindy Paul; Harold Pollack; Stephen Raffanti; Liisa Randall; Richard Rothman; Akhter Sabreen; Jeffrey Sankoff; Vanessa Sasso; Nathaniel Bernard Saylor; Elissa Schechter; Barbara Schechtman; Steven Schrantz; Alicia Scribner; Judy Shahan; Daniel Skiest; Freya Spielberg; Irijah S Stennett; Patrick Sullivan; Cathalene Teahan; Susan Thompson; Gretchen Torres; Vicken Totten; Krystn Wagner; Rochelle Walensky; Michael Waxman; Andrea Weddle; Douglas White; Tom Widell; James A Wilde; Keith Wrenn; Juliet Yonek Journal: Acad Emerg Med Date: 2008-12-06 Impact factor: 3.451
Authors: James L Harmon; Michelle Collins-Ogle; John A Bartlett; Julie Thompson; Julie Barroso Journal: J Assoc Nurses AIDS Care Date: 2013-04-09 Impact factor: 1.354