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Reaching and Retaining High-Risk HIV/AIDS Clients Through the Internet

Authors :
Justin C. Smith
Matthew Triplette
Elizabeth Torrone
Peter A. Leone
Caryl Feldacker
Source :
Health Promotion Practice. 12:522-528
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2010.

Abstract

The Internet is a popular way for people to meet casual sex partners. However, online outreach remains largely unexplored to promote voluntary counseling and testing for HIV. The Student Health Action Coalition’s HIV testing program (SHAC-HIV) targets high-risk clients through tailored Internet outreach via chat rooms, social networking sites, and online forums. The SHAC-HIV model also demonstrates that nontraditional testing sites can provide low-cost, client-centered, high-quality services to support increased demand for HIV-testing services. Within the clinic, SHAC-HIV’s testing model includes four major components: (a) reliance on a team of well-trained health sciences student volunteers; (b) rapid oral-fluid HIV tests; (c) universal, consent-based testing with client-centered health education and counseling; and (d) coordinated referrals for follow-up testing, treatment, and care. This approach reaches high-risk clients as well as undiagnosed infections. In 2007, there were nine confirmed positive results out of 389 tests, yielding a 2.3% positivity rate. This positivity percentage is higher than any other nontraditional testing site in North Carolina. This article describes the SHAC-HIV outreach and vo-luntary counseling and testing program with the aim of encouraging adoption of the model by other nontraditional testing sites.

Details

ISSN :
15526372 and 15248399
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Health Promotion Practice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....46d5f56ed73deb844d3dcff32bff16ab
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1524839909349178