| Literature DB >> 33238941 |
Roman Shrestha1,2, Haridah Alias3,4, Li P Wong3,4, Frederick L Altice5,3, Sin H Lim3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: HIV self-testing (HIVST) has the potential to improve HIV testing uptake and frequency for key populations like MSM who experience multiple barriers accessing clinic-based HIV testing. In the absence of HIVST in Malaysia, there is no guidance to inform HIVST delivery. This study investigated the acceptability of HIVST and preferences about the HIVST service delivery approaches using a standardized stated preference method.Entities:
Keywords: Conjoint analysis; HIV; HIV self-testing; Implementation science; Malaysia; Men who have sex with men
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33238941 PMCID: PMC7687720 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-09832-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Example of full-profile conjoint task (hypothetical HIV self-testing program scenarios)
Participant characteristics of Malaysian MSM, stratified by willingness to use HIV self-testing kit (2019, N = 544)
| Variables | Entire Sample | Willing to use HIVST ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency | % | |||
| Age (years): Mean (±SD) a | 30.6 (±8.0) | 30.2 (±7.6) | 0.008 | |
| Sexual orientation | 0.001 | |||
| Homosexual/Gay/PLUb | 432 | 79.4 | 320 (58.8) | |
| Bisexual | 98 | 18.0 | 80 (14.7) | |
| Othersc | 14 | 2.6 | 5 (0.9) | |
| Ethnicity | 0.001 | |||
| Malay | 272 | 50.0 | 220 (40.4) | |
| Chinese | 180 | 33.1 | 117 (21.5) | |
| Otherd | 92 | 16.9 | 68 (12.5) | |
| Relationship status | 0.425 | |||
| Singlee | 409 | 75.2 | 308 (56.6) | |
| Married/Partnered | 135 | 24.8 | 97 (17.8) | |
| Highest educational level | 0.744 | |||
| Secondary education and below | 70 | 12.9 | 51 (9.4) | |
| Tertiary education (College/University) | 474 | 87.1 | 354 (65.1) | |
| Employed | 0.727 | |||
| No | 155 | 28.5 | 117 (21.5) | |
| Yes | 389 | 71.5 | 288 (52.9) | |
| Monthly Income (MYR)f | 0.158 | |||
| < 3000 | 225 | 41.4 | 162 (29.8) | |
| 3000 - 5999 | 189 | 34.7 | 150 (27.6) | |
| ≥ 6000 | 130 | 23.9 | 93 (17.1) | |
| Any anal intercourse with another man (last 6 months) | 0.009 | |||
| No | 87 | 16.0 | 55 (10.1) | |
| Yes | 457 | 84.0 | 350 (64.3) | |
| Condomless anal sex (last 6 months) | 0.190 | |||
| No | 93 | 20.4 | 76 (16.6) | |
| Yes | 364 | 79.6 | 274 (60.0) | |
| Average number of male sexual partners (last 6 months): Mean (±SD)a | 5.1(±12.1) | 5.3(±13.6) | 0.117 | |
| Ever engaged in transactional sexg | 0.420 | |||
| No | 483 | 88.8 | 357 (65.6) | |
| Yes | 61 | 11.2 | 48 (8.8) | |
| Ever used recreational drugs before or during sexh | 0.505 | |||
| No | 422 | 77.6 | 317 (58.3) | |
| Yes | 122 | 22.4 | 88 (16.2) | |
| Ever been tested for HIV | 0.049 | |||
| No | 161 | 29.6 | 129 (23.7) | |
| Yes | 383 | 70.4 | 276 (50.7) | |
| Previously tested for HIV | 0.231 | |||
| Less than 6 months ago | 245 | 64.0 | 174 (45.4) | |
| 6–12 months ago | 66 | 17.2 | 53 (13.8) | |
| Over 12 months ago | 72 | 18.8 | 49 (12.8) | |
| Ever used an HIV self-testing kit | < 0.001 | |||
| No | 407 | 74.8 | 283 (52.0) | |
| Yes | 137 | 25.2 | 122 (22.4) | |
| I feel embarrassed when people relate HIV as “LGBT” disease | 339 | 62.3 | 262 (48.2) | 0.051 |
| I feel embarrassed when peers discover that I am getting tested for HIV | 273 | 50.2 | 223 (41.0) | < 0.001 |
| I feel discriminated of being mistreated and judged by the healthcare providers if they know my sexual identity | 374 | 68.8 | 292 (53.7) | 0.004 |
Note: a SD: standard deviation; b PLU: people like us; c Queer, heterosexual, and others; d Includes Indian, Sabahan, Sarawakian, and mixed; e Includes divorced and widowed; f MYR: Malaysian Ringgit; g Received any things or opportunities (e.g., mobile phone, cash, clothes, bag, study or employment opportunity) in exchange for sex; h Includes crystal meth/"ice”, ketamine, ecstasy, poppers, GHB/GBL) before or during anal sex: i HIVST: HIV self-testing
Acceptability (Mean) of hypothetical HIV self-testing with different attributes in order of decreasing acceptability among Malaysian MSM (2019, N = 544)
| Acceptability | HIV Self-Testing Attributes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost | Kit Collection Site | Privacy | Testing Support | Accuracy (%) | Kit Type | |
| 77.09 | Free | Home delivered | Name not required | Telephone Hotline/Texting | 99–100 | Fingerstick |
| 62.37 | Free | Home delivered | Name required | Online videos | 99–100 | Oral swab |
| 59.20 | Free | At a pharmacy | Name not required | Online videos | 95 | Oral swab |
| 57.15 | Pay some money | At a pharmacy | Name not required | Online videos | 99–100 | Fingerstick |
| 52.93 | Pay some money | Home delivered | Name not required | Telephone Hotline/Texting | 95 | Oral swab |
| 48.90 | Free | At a pharmacy | Name required | Telephone Hotline/Texting | 95 | Fingerstick |
| 47.41 | Pay some money | At a pharmacy | Name required | Telephone Hotline/Texting | 99–100 | Oral swab |
| 44.91 | Pay some money | Home delivered | Name required | Online videos | 95 | Fingerstick |
Relative importance and marginal utilities of HIV self-testing attribute levels among Malaysian MSM (2019)
| Attributes | Attribute Levels | RISa |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Free | 19.30 |
| Pay some money | ||
| Privacy | Name not required | 18.41 |
| Name required | ||
| Accuracy | 99–100% | 17.33 |
| 95% | ||
| Kit Collection Site | Home delivered | 16.99 |
| At a pharmacy | ||
| Kit Type | Fingerstick | 15.86 |
| Oral swab | ||
| Testing Support | Telephone hotline / Texting | 12.08 |
| Online videos |
Note: a Relative importance score
Fig. 2Marginal utilities of HIV self-testing attributes’ levels among Malaysian MSM (2019). * Constant: 4.756 (0.326), Pearson’s R: 0.995, Kendall’s tau: 1.00; Marginal utilities, also known as part-worth, of a specific attribute in participants’ ranking of the scenarios. They signify the extent to which a specific attribute contributes to the ranking of a scenario