Acceptability and feasibility of HIV recent infection surveillance by healthcare workers using a rapid test for recent infection at HIV testing sites — Malawi, 2019

Author:

Arons Melissa M.ORCID,Curran Kathryn G.,Msukwa Malango,Theu Joe,O’Malley Gabrielle,Ernst Alexandra,Namakhoma Ireen,Bello George,Telford Carson,Shanmugam Vedapuri,Parekh Bharat,Kim Evelyn,Dobbs Trudy,Payne Danielle,Gugsa Salem

Abstract

Abstract Background The Malawi Ministry of Health implemented a new surveillance activity in April 2019 to detect recent HIV infections using a rapid test for recent infection (RTRI) to identify areas of ongoing transmission and guide response activities. Setting At 23 health facilities in Blantyre District, healthcare workers (HCWs) were trained to conduct recent infection testing. In September 2019, we conducted a cross-sectional survey at these sites to explore the acceptability and feasibility of integrating this activity into routine HIV testing services (HTS). Methods Research assistants interviewed HCWs using a semi-structured survey. Descriptive statistics were used to summarize quantitative responses and thematic analysis was used to group open-ended text. Results We interviewed 119 HCWs. Eighty-two percent of participants reported the RTRI was easy-to-use. HCWs perceived high client acceptability; 100% reported clients as ‘somewhat’ or ‘very accepting’. Challenges included 68% of HCWs estimating they spend ≥20 min beyond routine HTS per client for this activity and 51% performing at least two additional finger pricks to complete the testing algorithm. HCWs differed in their perceptions of whether results should be returned to clients. Conclusion This study assessed HCW experiences using point-of-care RTRIs for HIV recent infection surveillance. Overall, HCWs perceived RTRIs to be acceptable, easy-to-use, and valuable. Though only clients with new HIV diagnoses are tested for recent infection, additional time may be substantial at high-volume health service delivery points. Providing response plans or aggregated recent infection results to HCWs and/or clients may support motivation and sustainability of this novel surveillance activity.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Policy

Reference19 articles.

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2. Ministry of Health, Malawi. Malawi Population-Based HIV Impact Assessment (MPHIA) 2015-2016: Final Report. Lilongwe: Ministry of Health; 2018.

3. Parekh B, Detorio, M., Shanmugam, V., Yufenyuy, E., Dobbs, T., Kim, A. Performance evaluation of Asante™ Rapid Recency Assay for HIV diagnosis and detection of recent infection: potential for surveillance and prevention. IAS 2017. 9th IAS Conference on HIV Science. Paris, France; Abstract TUPEC0849. 2017. http://www.ias2017.org/Portals/1/Files/IAS2017_LO.compressed.pdf

4. UNAIDS/WHO Working Group on Global HIV/AIDS and STI surveillance. Technical update on HIV incidence assays for surveillance and monitoring purposes. Geneva: WHO; 2015.

5. Fogel JM, Piwowar-Manning E, Debevec B, et al. Brief report: impact of early antiretroviral therapy on the performance of HIV rapid tests and HIV incidence assays. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2017;75:426–30.

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Open Data Kit;Open Electronic Data Capture Tools for Medical and Biomedical Research and Medical Allied Professionals;2024

2. Correction: Acceptability and feasibility of HIV recent infection surveillance by healthcare workers using a rapid test for recent infection at HIV testing sites — Malawi, 2019;BMC Health Services Research;2022-07-15

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