Rosen David L, Golin Carol E, Grodensky Catherine A, May Jeanine, Bowling J Michael, DeVellis Robert F, White Becky L, Wohl David A
a Department of Medicine , University of North Carolina , Chapel Hill , NC , USA.
AIDS Care. 2015;27(5):545-54. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2014.989486. Epub 2014 Dec 15.
HIV testing in prison settings has been identified as an important mechanism to detect cases among high-risk, underserved populations. Several public health organizations recommend that testing across health-care settings, including prisons, be delivered in an opt-out manner. However, implementation of opt-out testing within prisons may pose challenges in delivering testing that is informed and understood to be voluntary. In a large state prison system with a policy of voluntary opt-out HIV testing, we randomly sampled adult prisoners in each of seven intake prisons within two weeks after their opportunity to be HIV tested. We surveyed prisoners' perception of HIV testing as voluntary or mandatory and used multivariable statistical models to identify factors associated with their perception. We also linked survey responses to lab records to determine if prisoners' test status (tested or not) matched their desired and perceived test status. Thirty-eight percent (359/936) perceived testing as voluntary. The perception that testing was mandatory was positively associated with age less than 25 years (adjusted relative risk [aRR]: 1.45, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.24, 1.71) and preference that testing be mandatory (aRR: 1.81, 95% CI: 1.41, 2.31) but negatively associated with entry into one of the intake prisons (aRR: 0.41 95% CI: 0.27, 0.63). Eighty-nine percent of prisoners wanted to be tested, 85% were tested according to their wishes, and 82% correctly understood whether or not they were tested. Most prisoners wanted to be HIV tested and were aware that they had been tested, but less than 40% understood testing to be voluntary. Prisoners' understanding of the voluntary nature of testing varied by intake prison and by a few individual-level factors. Testing procedures should ensure that opt-out testing is informed and understood to be voluntary by prisoners and other vulnerable populations.
监狱环境中的艾滋病毒检测已被视为在高危、医疗服务不足人群中发现病例的一项重要机制。几家公共卫生组织建议,包括监狱在内的所有医疗机构的检测应采用“退出式”方式进行。然而,在监狱内实施“退出式”检测可能在提供经告知且被理解为自愿的检测方面面临挑战。在一个实行自愿“退出式”艾滋病毒检测政策的大型州监狱系统中,我们在七个接收监狱中的每一个监狱里,于成年囚犯有机会接受艾滋病毒检测后的两周内对他们进行随机抽样。我们调查了囚犯对艾滋病毒检测是自愿还是强制的认知,并使用多变量统计模型来确定与其认知相关的因素。我们还将调查回复与实验室记录相联系,以确定囚犯的检测状态(是否接受检测)是否与他们期望的以及感知到的检测状态相符。38%(359/936)的囚犯认为检测是自愿的。认为检测是强制的这一认知与年龄小于25岁呈正相关(调整后相对风险[aRR]:1.45,95%置信区间[CI]:1.24,1.71)以及希望检测是强制的偏好呈正相关(aRR:1.81,95%CI:1.