| Literature DB >> 29914449 |
Paola Scognamiglio1, Giacomina Chiaradia2, Marta Giovanetti1, Emidio Albertini3, Antonella Camposeragna4, Massimo Farinella5, Daniela Lorenzetti6, Massimo Oldrini7, Laura Rancilio8, Anna Caraglia9, Francesco Paolo Maraglino9, Giuseppe Ippolito1, Enrico Girardi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Globally the access to HIV testing has greatly increased over the past 30 years. Nonetheless, a high proportion of people living with HIV remains undiagnosed, even in resource rich countries. To increase the proportion of people aware of their HIV serostatus and their access to medical care, several strategies have been proposed including HIV rapid test programs offered outside health facilities. The aim of this project was to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of the HIV rapid testing offered in community and outreach settings in Italy.Entities:
Keywords: Acceptability; Community-based services; Counseling and testing; HIV rapid test
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29914449 PMCID: PMC6006581 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5680-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flow of people in the project
Socio-demographic characteristics of tested population (overall and stratified by type of setting)
| Tested population | NGO facilities | Services for migrants | DU services | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median age (IQR) | 33 years (26–43) | 31 years (25–41) | 37 years (29–47) | 35 years (28–44) |
| Gender | ||||
| Men | 1934 (65.6) | 1123 (70.3) | 531 (57.2) | 280 (66. 0) |
| Women | 973 (33) | 445 (27.9) | 391 (42.1) | 137 (32.3) |
| Transgender | 32 (1.1) | 23 (1.5) | 4 (0.4) | 5 (1.2) |
| Unknown | 10 (0.3) | 6 (0.4) | 2 (0.2) | 2 (0.5) |
| Origin | ||||
| Italian | 1782 (60.4) | 1432 (89.7) | 86 (9.3) | 264 (62.3) |
| Foreigners | 1167 (39.6) | 165 (10.3) | 842 (90.7) | 160 (37.7) |
| Education (yy) | ||||
| ≤ 8 | 684 (23.2) | 167 (10.5) | 340 (36.6) | 177 (41.7) |
| > 8 | 2249 (76.3) | 1421 (88.9) | 583 (62.8) | 245 (57.8) |
| Unknown | 16 (0.5) | 9 (0.6) | 5 (0.6) | 2 (0.5) |
| Occupation | ||||
| Employed | 1478 (50.1) | 939 (58.8) | 413 (44.5) | 126 (29.7) |
| Occasional employed | 485 (16.4) | 426 (26.7) | 37 (4) | 22 (5.2) |
| Unemployed | 968 (32.8) | 223 (14) | 472 (50.9) | 273 (64.4) |
| Unknown | 18 (0.6) | 9 (0.6) | 6 (0.6) | 3 (0.7) |
| Marital status | ||||
| Never married | 1895 (64.3) | 1283 (80.3) | 374 (40.3) | 238 (56.1) |
| Married/Cohabiting | 694 (23.5) | 206 (12.9) | 378 (40.7) | 110 (25.9) |
| Married before | 305 (10.3) | 78 (4.9) | 156 (16.8) | 71 (16.7) |
| Unknown | 55 (1.9) | 30 (1.9) | 20 (2.2) | 5 (1.2) |
| Previous HIV test | ||||
| No | 1334 (45.2) | 565 (35.4) | 613 (66.1) | 156 (36.8) |
| Yes | 1545 (52.4) | 1016 (63.3) | 283 (30.5) | 246 (58.0) |
| Unknown | 70 (2.4) | 16 (1.0) | 32 (3.4) | 22 (5.2) |
| Previous STIa | ||||
| No | 2406 (81.6) | 1289 (80.7) | 777 (83.7) | 431 (80.4) |
| Yes | 392 (13.3) | 257 (16.1) | 90 (9.7) | 45 (10.6) |
| Unknown | 151 (5.1) | 52 (3.3) | 61 (6.6) | 38 (9.0) |
IQR interquartile range, NGO nongovernmental organization, DU drug users, STI sexually transmitted infection
ain previous 12 months
Sexual and drug using behaviors of tested population (overall and stratified by type of setting)
| Tested population | NGOfacilities | Services for migrants | DU services | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sexual behaviors | ||||
| Heterosex | 1519 (51.5) | 626 (39.2) | 608 (65.5) | 285(67.2) |
| Male SGS | 794 (26.9) | 766 (48) | 14 (1.5) | 14 (3.3) |
| Condom in the last sexual intercoursea | ||||
| No | 1826 (61.9) | 1022 (64.0) | 534 (57.5) | 270 (63.7) |
| Paying for sexa | ||||
| Yes | 507 (17.2) | 249 (15.6) | 123 (13.2) | 135 (31.8) |
| Prostitution (sex for money)a | ||||
| Yes | 242 (8.2) | 112 (7.0) | 49 (5.3) | 81 (19.1) |
| Sex under influence of drugs or alcohola | ||||
| Yes | 916 (31.1) | 552 (34.6) | 121 (13.0) | 243 (57.2) |
| Drug usea | ||||
| Intravenus drug use | 135 (4.6) | 19 (1.2) | 11 (1.2) | 105 (24.8) |
| Not intravenus drug use | 675 (22.8) | 448 (28.1) | 63 (6.8) | 164 (38.7) |
| Drug use way not known | 132 (4.5) | 97 (6.1) | 19 (2.0) | 16 (3.8) |
NGO nongovernmental organization, DU drug users, SGS Same gender sex
ain previous 12 months
Characteristics and sexual/drug using behaviors of first-time testers
| First testers | |
|---|---|
| Median age (IQR) | 30.5 (24–41) years |
| Gender | |
| Men | 758 (56.8) |
| Women | 569 (42.7) |
| Transgender | 1 (0.1) |
| Unknown | 6 (0.4) |
| Setting | |
| NGOs facilities | 565 (42.4) |
| Services for migrants | 613 (46.0) |
| DU services | 156 (11.7) |
| Origin | |
| Italian | 630 (47.2) |
| Foreigners | 704 (52.8) |
| Education (YY) | |
| ≤ 8 | 362 (27.1) |
| > 8 | 967 (72.5) |
| Unknown | 5 (0.4) |
| Marital Status | |
| Never married | 794 (59.5) |
| Married/Cohabiting | 375 (28.1) |
| Married before | 136 (10.2) |
| Unknown | 29 (2.2) |
| Previous STIa | |
| 137 (10.3) | |
| Sexual behaviors | |
| Heterosex | 791 (59.3) |
| Male SGS | 184 (13.8) |
| Condom in the last sexual intercoursea | |
| No | 824 (61.8) |
| Paying for sexa | |
| Yes | 190 (14.2) |
| Prostitutiona | |
| Yes | 76 (5.7) |
| Sex under influence of drugs or alcohola | |
| Yes | 379 (28.4) |
| Drug usea | |
| Intravenus drug use | 16 (1.2) |
| Non intravenous drug use | 297 (22.2) |
| Drug use way not known | 49 (3.7) |
| Preliminary positive test | 8 (0.6%) |
IQR interquartile range, NGO nongovernmental organization, DU drug users, STI sexually transmitted infection, SGS same gender sex
ain previous 12 months