The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
estimates that 156,300 (95% CI 144,100–165,900) Americans living with HIV in
2012 were unaware of their infection. To increase knowledge of HIV status, CDC
guidelines seek to make HIV screening a routine part of medical care. This
paper examines how routinely California primary care providers test for HIV and
how providers’ knowledge of California’s streamlined testing requirements, use
of sexual histories, and having an electronic medical record prompt for HIV
testing, relate to test offers.
We surveyed all ten California health plans offered under
health reform’s Insurance Exchange (response rate = 50%) and 322 primary care
providers to those plans (response rate = 19%) to assess use of HIV screening
and risk assessments.
Only 31.7% of 60 responding providers reported offering HIV
tests to all or most new enrollees and only 8.8% offered an HIV test of blood
samples all or most of the time despite the California law requiring that
providers offer HIV testing of blood samples in primary care settings.
Twenty-eight of the 60 providers (46.6%) were unaware that California had
reduced barriers to HIV screening by eliminating the requirement for written
informed consent and pre-test counseling. HIV screening of new enrollees all or
most of the time was reported by 53.1% of the well-informed providers, but only
7.1% of the less informed providers, a difference of 46 percentage points. Providers who routinely obtained sexual histories were 29
percentage points more likely to screen for HIV all or
most of the time than those who did not ask sexual histories.
Changing HIV screening requirements is important, but not
sufficient to make HIV testing a routine part of medical care. Provider
education to increase knowledge about the changed HIV testing requirements could
positively impact testing rates.
Below: Physician Assessments of Importance of Barriers to HIV Testing
Full article at: http://goo.gl/GW70CI
By: Leibowitz AA1, Garcia-Aguilar AT2, Farrell K2.
- 1Department of Public Policy, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, Box 951656, Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1656, United States of America.
- 2Department of Public Policy, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, Box 951656, Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1656, United States of America; AIDS Project Los Angeles, 611 South Kingsley Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90005, United States of America.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
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