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Potential public health benefits of HIV testing occurring at home in Australia.

Authors :
Guy RJ
Prestage GP
Grulich A
Holt M
Conway DP
Jamil MS
Keen P
Cunningham P
Wilson DP
Source :
The Medical journal of Australia [Med J Aust] 2015 Jun 01; Vol. 202 (10), pp. 529-31.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In many countries, including Australia, policies have recently changed to support HIV self-testing. The decision has created much debate about the public health benefits of the strategy versus the risks. Self-testing for HIV was approved in the US on the basis that it would facilitate greater HIV testing uptake, despite having a lower sensitivity than laboratory HIV immunoassays. We calculated the frequency of self-testing that would be required among Australian gay and bisexual men at high-risk for there to be a public health benefit (detection of HIV infections that would have otherwise remained undiagnosed). At a population level, if access to HIV self-testing led to men supplementing their usual sexual health check-ups (involving a laboratory HIV immunoassay) with one or more self-tests at home, or self-tests led to untested gay and bisexual men having an HIV test for the first time, there would be a public health benefit. If men replaced their average of one laboratory HIV immunoassay per year with self-testing at home, then three self-tests would be needed to counteract the lower sensitivity of the self-test (so zero infections would be missed). If four self-tests were undertaken then additional infections would be detected (ie, there would be a public health benefit). Additional public health benefits include a reduction in the period of undiagnosed infection, which is known to be a period of relatively high infectiousness.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1326-5377
Volume :
202
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Medical journal of Australia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26021364
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5694/mja14.01210