Prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV remains a
key public health priority in most developing countries. The provider Initiated
Opt – Out Prenatal HIV Screening Approach, recommended by the World Health
Organization (WHO) lately has been adopted and translated into policy in most
Sub – Saharan African countries. To better ascertain the ethical reasons for or
against the use of this approach, we carried out a literature review of the
ethics literature.
Papers published in English and French Languages between
1990 and 2015 from the following data bases were searched: Pubmed, Cochrane
literature, Embase, Cinhal, Web of Science and Google Scholar. After screening
from 302 identified relevant articles, 21 articles were retained for the
critical review.
Most authors considered this approach ethically justifiable
due to its potential benefits to the mother, foetus and society (Beneficence).
The breaching of respect for autonomy was considered acceptable on the grounds
of libertarian paternalism. Most authors considered the Opt - Out approach to
be less stigmatizing than the Opt - In. The main arguments against the Opt -
Out approach were: non respect of patient autonomy, informed consent becoming a
meaningless concept and the HIV test becoming compulsory, risk of losing trust
in health care providers, neglect of social and psychological implications of
doing an HIV test, risk of aggravation of stigma if all tested patients are not
properly cared for and neglect of sociocultural peculiarities.
The Opt – Out approach could be counterproductive in case
gender sensitive issues within the various sociocultural representations are
neglected, and actions to offer holistic care to all women who shall
potentially test positive for HIV were not effectively ascertained. The
Provider Initiated Opt – Out Prenatal HIV Screening option remains ethically
acceptable, but deserves caution, active monitoring and evaluation within the
translation of this approach into to practice.
Full article
at: http://goo.gl/1NqikL
1Centre for Population Studies and Health
Promotion, CPSHP, Yaounde, 7535, BP, Cameroon
2Department of Military Health, Ministry of
Defense, Yaounde, Cameroon
3Interfaculty Centre for Biomedical Ethics
and Law, Leuven, KU, Belgium
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