Hooshyar Dina, Surís Alina M, Czarnogorski Maggie, Lepage James P, Bedimo Roger, North Carol S
a Department of Mental Health , Veterans Affairs North Texas Health Care System , Dallas , TX , USA.
AIDS Care. 2014 Jan;26(1):95-9. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2013.802279. Epub 2013 Jun 11.
In the USA, 21% of the estimated 1.1 million people living with human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) are unaware they are HIV-infected. In 2011, Veterans Health Administration (VHA)'s Office of Public Health in conjunction with VHA's Health Care for Homeless Veterans Program funded grants to support rapid HIV testing at homeless outreach events because homeless populations are more likely to obtain emergent rather than preventive care and have a higher HIV seroprevalence as compared to the general population. Because of a Veterans Affairs North Texas Health Care System (VANTHCS)'s laboratory testing requirement, VANTHCS partnered with community agencies to offer rapid HIV testing for the first time at VANTHCS' 2011 Homeless Stand Downs in Dallas, Fort Worth, and Texoma, Texas. Homeless Stand Downs are outreach events that connect Veterans with services. Veterans who declined testing were asked their reasons for declining. Comparisons by Homeless Stand Down site used Pearson χ², substituting Fisher's Exact tests for expected cell sizes <5. Of the 910 Veterans attending the Homeless Stand Downs, 261 Veterans reported reasons for declining HIV testing, and 133 Veterans were tested, where 92% of the tested Veterans obtained their test results at the events - all tested negative. Veterans' reported reasons for declining HIV testing included previous negative result (n=168), no time to test (n=49), no risk factors (n=36), testing is not a priority (n=11), uninterested in knowing serostatus (n=6), and HIV-infected (n=3). Only "no time to test" differed significantly by Homeless Stand Down site. Nonresponse rate was 54%. Offering rapid HIV testing at Homeless Stand Downs is a promising testing venue since 15% of Veterans attending VANTHCS' Homeless Stand Downs were tested for HIV, and majority obtained their HIV test results at point-of-care while further research is needed to determine how to improve these rates.
在美国,估计110万感染人类免疫缺陷病毒/获得性免疫缺陷综合征(HIV/AIDS)的人群中,有21%的人不知道自己感染了HIV。2011年,退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)的公共卫生办公室与VHA的无家可归退伍军人医疗保健项目联合提供资助,以支持在无家可归者外展活动中进行快速HIV检测,因为与普通人群相比,无家可归者更倾向于接受紧急护理而非预防性护理,且HIV血清阳性率更高。由于退伍军人事务部北德克萨斯医疗保健系统(VANTHCS)的实验室检测要求,VANTHCS与社区机构合作,于2011年在德克萨斯州达拉斯、沃思堡和特克索马的VANTHCS无家可归者安置活动中首次提供快速HIV检测。无家可归者安置活动是将退伍军人与服务联系起来的外展活动。拒绝检测的退伍军人被问及拒绝的原因。通过无家可归者安置地点进行比较时使用Pearson χ²检验,对于预期单元格大小<5的情况,用Fisher精确检验代替。在参加无家可归者安置活动的910名退伍军人中,261名退伍军人报告了拒绝HIV检测的原因,133名退伍军人接受了检测,其中92%的接受检测的退伍军人在活动中获得了检测结果——所有检测结果均为阴性。退伍军人报告的拒绝HIV检测的原因包括之前检测结果为阴性(n = 168)、没有时间检测(n = 49)、没有风险因素(n = 36)、检测不是优先事项(n = 11)、对了解血清状态不感兴趣(n = 6)以及已感染HIV(n = 3)。只有“没有时间检测”在无家可归者安置地点之间存在显著差异。无回应率为54%。在无家可归者安置活动中提供快速HIV检测是一个有前景的检测场所,因为参加VANTHCS无家可归者安置活动的退伍军人中有15%接受了HIV检测,且大多数人在现场护理时获得了HIV检测结果,不过仍需要进一步研究以确定如何提高这些比例。