1. Lifetime HIV testing among three samples of adults with histories of incarceration in Southern California
- Author
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Ojeda, Victoria D, Jaeger, Melissa B, Hiller-Venegas, Sarah, Parker, Tamara, Lyles, Maurice, Castillo, Silvia, Vega, Gustavo, Moreno, Melissa, Schuler, Briana, Groneman, Arthur, Berliant, Emily, Romero, Natalie, Edwards, Todd M, Jimenez, Cielo, Lister, Zephon, Barksdale, Jerrica, Bazzi, Angela, Gaines, Tommi, and Gilmer, Todd
- Subjects
Public Health ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Health Disparities ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Social Determinants of Health ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Minority Health ,Pediatric AIDS ,Pediatric ,Health Services ,Women's Health ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,California ,Adult ,HIV Infections ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Prisoners ,HIV Testing ,Young Adult ,Adolescent ,Prevalence ,Middle Aged ,Hispanic or Latino ,Mass Screening ,Incarceration ,HIV testing ,probation ,formerly incarcerated ,justice impacted ,parole ,Black or African American ,SDG 16: Peace ,justice and strong institutions ,SDG 17: Partnerships for the goals ,SDG 3: Good health and well-being ,SDG 4: Quality education ,SDG 5: Gender equality ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Public health ,Sociology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ABSTRACTJustice-impacted persons may inconsistently access HIV testing. This cross-sectional secondary analysis investigates lifetime HIV testing prevalence among adults with prior histories of incarceration in Southern California, United States, participating in health-focused programming (n = 3 studies). Self-reported demographic and lifetime HIV testing data were collected between 2017-2023; descriptive analyses were conducted. Across the three samples, at least 74% of participants were male; Latino and African American individuals accounted for nearly two-thirds of participants. Lifetime HIV testing ranged from 72.8% to 84.2%. Males were significantly more likely than females to report never being tested in two samples and accounted for >95% of those never tested. No statistically significant differences in testing were observed by race/ethnicity. Single young adults (ages 18-26) were less likely than their partnered peers to report testing. HIV testing is critical for ensuring that individuals access prevention and treatment. HIV testing among justice-impacted adults in this study was higher than in the general population, potentially due to opt-out testing in correctional settings. Nevertheless, these findings underscore the importance of implementing targeted interventions to reduce structural (e.g., health insurance, access to self-testing kits) and social barriers (e.g., HIV stigma) to increase HIV testing among justice-impacted males and single young adults.
- Published
- 2024