| Literature DB >> 25134822 |
Natalie Leon1, Catherine Mathews, Simon Lewin, Meg Osler, Andrew Boulle, Carl Lombard.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We examined linkage to care for patients with sexually transmitted infection who were diagnosed HIV-positive via the provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling (PITC) approach, as compared to the voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) approach, as little is known about the impact of expanded testing strategies on linkage to care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25134822 PMCID: PMC4147183 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Similarities and differences between the VCT and the PITC interventions for patients seeking STI care in Cape Town
| Voluntary counselling and testing for HIV for STI patients in control sites | Provider–initiated HIV testing and counselling for STI patients in intervention sites | |
|---|---|---|
|
| • Patients come to the clinic to seek care for an STI complaint. | • Patients come to the clinic to seek care for an STI complaint. |
| • HIV testing is not offered by the STI nurse as part of the standard clinical care. | • The STI nurse routinely offers all STI patients an HIV test as part of the standard STI clinical care. | |
| • The STI nurse may refer some STI patients for HIV testing, usually for medical reasons. | • The STI patient is asked to opt-out of HIV testing during the STI consultation. | |
| • Should patient choose to adhere to the medical referral, then a separate clinic visit is usually required for the HIV counselling and testing to be done. | ||
|
| • Usually provided by trained lay counsellors. | • Professional healthcare providers (STI nurses) trained to provide PITC. |
| • Basic counselling training can be lengthy (10 to 20 days). | • Training is short (2 days) and is focused on how to offer the test and how to get informed consent from patients. | |
|
| • The primary purpose is to promote uptake of HIV testing and to link people to HIV care and prevention services. | • The primary purpose is, similarly, to promote uptake of HIV testing and increase the number of people who know their HIV status. |
| • The emphasis is on assessing patient readiness to test, and the counsellor is supposed to remain neutral about the choice (and not to promote taking the HIV test as the preferred option). | • The intervention also aims to integrate HIV testing efficiently into a regular STI consultation, while still respecting the need for patient informed consent. | |
| • The provider can promote HIV testing as the medically recommended option (rather than remaining neutral about the preferred choice). | ||
|
| • Patient-centred counselling techniques focus on promoting an informed decision and include basic HIV information, risk assessment, an assessment of readiness to test, and risk reduction messages. | • Offer of HIV testing is introduced using regular clinical communication as part of the STI consultation. This involves a brief explanation of why an HIV test is recommended in the context of an STI consultation, a brief assessment of the patient’s readiness to test for HIV, offering the HIV test and opportunity for the patient to ask questions. Risk assessment and risk reduction are dealt with as part of the regular STI consultation. |
| • Written informed consent for testing is obtained. | • Written informed consent for testing is obtained. | |
| • Can take up to 25 minutes. | • Intervention is meant to add maximum 5 to 10 minutes to the STI consultation when efficiently integrated. | |
|
| • Due to limits to their scope of practice, lay counsellors cannot perform the rapid HIV tests themselves. | • The nurse does the HIV rapid test along with other blood tests during the STI consultation, which reduces waiting time for patients. |
| • The rapid test is performed by a nurse, which may involve some waiting time. | ||
|
| • The nurse communicates the result of the rapid HIV test to the lay counsellor. | • The nurse refers the patient to a lay counsellor in the facility, to receive the HIV test result and post-test counselling. |
| • The lay counsellor then informs the patient and provides post-test counselling. | • The patient may need to wait for a lay counsellor to be available. | |
| • The primary focus is on providing emotional support for HIV-positive patients and linking them to care, as well as providing risk reduction messages for HIV-positive and HIV-negative patients. | • The primary focus is similarly on emotional support for HIV-positive patients, but with stronger linkage to HIV care ( | |
| • Lay counsellors are encouraged to provide up to three follow-up counselling sessions with HIV-positive patients. | • There is less focus on HIV-negative patients. |
Participants: proportion tested HIV positive and demographic information
| Study participants | Intervention % (n) | Control % (n) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 56.4 (1752) | 42.6 (2821) | 0.037* |
|
| 18.6 (326) | 21.4 (604) | 0.147 |
|
| 28 (14–54) | 26 (3–70) | 0.162 |
|
| 62.9 (205) | 66.7 (403) | 0.423 |
*Significant difference at p < .05. Pearson chi2,.
Linkage to care: CD4 and viral load testing done, median CD4 values and median time taken, by study arm
| Participants | Intervention | Control | Odds ratio | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 69.9% (n = 228/326) | 65.2% (n = 394/604) | Adjusted 0.82 (CI: 0.44-1.51) | 0.526 |
| Unadjusted 0.81 (CI: 0.43-1.52) | 0.504 | |||
|
| 14.9% (n = 30/202) | 10.9% (n = 39/358) | Adjusted 0.69 (CI: 0.42-1.12) | 0.131 |
| Unadjusted 0.70 (CI: 0.48-1.02) | 0.064 | |||
|
| 386 (17–1509) | 364 (11–1445) | 0.446 | |
|
| 3 (1–290) | 2 (1–337) | 0.646 | |
|
| 245 (177–560) | 306 (195–550) | 0.622 | |
|
| 214 (177–230) | 288 (195–492) | 0.007* |
*Significant difference at p < .05. Pearson chi2, Log rank test.
Figure 1Gaps in linkage to care: proportion of HIV-positive patients with no record of CD4 testing and the proportion of ART-eligible patients with no record of viral load testing, by study arm. Figure 1 shows the main outcomes as a cascade of care to illustrate the gaps in linkage to care after testing HIV-positive in both arms of the study. The first gap in linkage to care was those HIV-positive patients who did not have a record of CD4 testing (indicated by the top set of brackets). The proportion of those patients with CD4 test records is represented by the second set of maroon-coloured bars. The third set of smaller green bars is the proportion of those with CD4 records who were ART-eligible. The last set of small, purple bars indicate those ART-eligible patients with records of viral load tests (expressed as a proportion of those who were ART-eligible). Finally, the second gap in linkage to care in the graph is the proportion of ART-eligible patients with no record of viral load testing (shown by the lower set of brackets).