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Journal ArticleDOI

A randomized trial on acceptability of voluntary HIV counselling and testing.

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TLDR
Examination of factors affecting readiness for and acceptability of voluntary HIV counselling and testing and their effects on preparedness and acceptance are examined.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES To examine factors affecting readiness for and acceptability of voluntary HIV counselling and testing (VCT). METHODS Participants in a population-based HIV survey conducted in an urban population in Zambia in 1996 were offered VCT. Although 29% of them expressed interest in being tested (readiness), only 4% of this group used the services (i.e. acceptability). When the survey was repeated 3 years later, VCT was designed differently to assess acceptability. At the cluster level the participants were randomly allocated to VCT either at the local clinic (similar to 1996, n = 1102) or at an optional location (n = 1343). RESULTS Readiness varied significantly by age group (47% in age group 20-24 years vs. 18% in age group 40-49 years). There were contrasts between young (15-24 years) and older age groups (25-49 years) regarding the main factors associated with readiness. Whereas self-perceived risk of being HIV infected was the only significant factor among the young, poor self-rated health and ever HIV tested were important factors among the older. The acceptability was 11.8% among the group allocated to VCT at the local clinic compared with 55.8% for the group allocated to an optional location (RR, 4.7). CONCLUSIONS Perceived risk of HIV infection had a major influence on VCT readiness among young people, whereas declining general health status, as indicated by self-rated health, was most evident among those of older age. A strong effect of placement on acceptability of VCT was demonstrated, indicating this barrier to be important in explaining low demands for VCT in the past. Differences in perceptions of how confidentiality is handled at the two locations might be an important underlying factor.

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Citations
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The Utilization of Testing and Counseling for HIV: A Review of the Social and Behavioral Evidence

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that social factors have a considerable impact on testing, and it is shown that the services linked to testing are key determinants of utilization, and the implications for HIV testing programs are considered.
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Systematic review and meta-analysis of community and facility-based HIV testing to address linkage to care gaps in sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: Expanding home and mobile testing, self-testing and outreach to key populations with facilitated linkage can increase the proportion of men, young adults and high-risk individuals linked to HIV treatment and prevention, and decrease HIV burden.
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A systematic review of qualitative findings on factors enabling and deterring uptake of HIV testing in Sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: Improving uptake of HIV testing requires addressing perception of low risk of HIV infection and perceived inability to live with HIV, and continuing addressing HIV-related stigma, which is intricately linked to individual economic support.
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Routine HIV testing in Botswana: a population-based study on attitudes, practices, and human rights concerns.

TL;DR: Routine testing appears to be widely supported and may reduce barriers to testing in Botswana, and measures should be implemented to assure true informed consent and human rights safeguards, including protection from HIV-related discrimination and protection of women against partner violence related to testing.
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Low male partner participation in antenatal HIV counselling and testing in northern Tanzania: implications for preventive programs

TL;DR: The prevalence and predictors for male partner participation in HIV voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) at two primary healthcare clinics in Moshi urban, Tanzania as well as the effect of partner participation on uptake of HIV perinatal interventions are described.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Self-rated health and mortality : a review of twenty-seven community studies

TL;DR: This work examines the growing number of studies of survey respondents' global self-ratings of health as predictors of mortality in longitudinal studies of representative community samples and suggests several approaches to the next stage of research in this field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficacy of voluntary HIV-1 counselling and testing in individuals and couples in Kenya, Tanzania, and Trinidad: a randomised trial.

TL;DR: Data support the efficacy of HIV-1 VCT in promoting behaviour change in individuals and sex-partner couples in Nairobi, Dar es Salaam, and Port of Spain.
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Cost-effectiveness of voluntary HIV-1 counselling and testing in reducing sexual transmission of HIV-1 in Kenya and Tanzania

TL;DR: HIV-1 VCT is highly cost-effective in urban east African settings, but slightly less so than interventions such as improvement of sexually transmitted disease services and universal provision of nevirapine to pregnant women in high-prevalence settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cost effectiveness of single-dose nevirapine regimen for mothers and babies to decrease vertical HIV-1 transmission in sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: The cost effectiveness of HIVNET 012 was robust under a wide range of parameters in the sensitivity analysis, and in lower seroprevalence areas, when multidose regimens are not cost effective, nevirapine therapy could have a major public-health impact at a reasonable cost.
Journal ArticleDOI

Declining HIV prevalence and risk behaviours in Zambia: evidence from surveillance and population-based surveys.

TL;DR: Efforts to sustain the ongoing process of change in the well-educated segments of the population should not be undervalued, but the modest change in behaviour identified among the most deprived groups represents the major preventive challenge.
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