| Literature DB >> 26036465 |
Roland C Merchant1,2, Allison K DeLong3, Tao Liu4, Janette R Baird5.
Abstract
In this randomized, controlled trial among 957 English- or Spanish-speaking drug misusing adult emergency department (ED) patients, we determined if a tailored brief intervention (BI) increased uptake of rapid HIV/HCV screening, and identified factors associated with greater screening uptake. Rapid HIV/HCV screening uptake was greater in the control than the BI arm (45 vs. 38 %; p < 0.04). Screening uptake depended on elapsed study time and which research staff member offered testing. In the control arm, uptake was lowest for those spending <30 or ≥90 min in the study. In the BI arm, screening uptake generally increased over time. Tailored BI content specifically addressing participant HIV/HCV knowledge, HIV/HCV risk behaviors, or need for HIV/HCV screening was not associated with greater screening uptake. These study findings suggested factors that should be considered when designing future ED-based screening initiatives, such as elapsed study time, who offers testing, and the content of interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Drug abuse; Emergency medicine; HIV; Hepatitis C; Intervention studies; Mass screening
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26036465 PMCID: PMC4600425 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-015-1103-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165