Brady Kathleen A, Storm Deborah S, Naghdi Azita, Frederick Toni, Fridge Jessica, Hoyt Mary Jo
1 AIDS Activities Coordinating Office, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
2 François-Xavier Bagnoud Center, School of Nursing, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Newark, NJ, USA.
Public Health Rep. 2017 Jan/Feb;132(1):76-84. doi: 10.1177/0033354916681477. Epub 2016 Dec 12.
We sought to describe the current status of perinatal HIV exposure surveillance (PHES) activities and regulations in the United States and to make recommendations to strengthen PHES.
In 2014, we sent an online survey to health departments in the 50 states, District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, and 6 cities and counties (Chicago, Illinois; Houston, Texas; Los Angeles, California; New York, New York; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and San Francisco, California). We analyzed responses from 56 of the 59 (95%) jurisdictions.
Thirty-three of 56 jurisdictions (59%) reported conducting PHES and following infants to determine their infection status. Of the 33 jurisdictions performing PHES, 28 (85%) linked maternal and infant data, but only 12 (36%) determined the HIV care status of postpartum women. Themes of respondents' recommendations for strengthening PHES centered on updating laws and regulations to support PHES, reporting all HIV test results and linking vital records with PHES data to identify and follow HIV-exposed infants, communicating with health care providers to improve reporting, training staff, and getting help from experienced jurisdictions to implement PHES.
Our findings indicate that data on perinatal exposure collected through the current system are inadequate to comprehensively monitor and prevent perinatal HIV exposure and transmission. Comprehensive PHES data collection and reporting are needed to sustain the progress that has been made toward lowering perinatal HIV transmission rates. We propose that minimum standards be established for perinatal HIV exposure reporting to improve the completeness, quality, and efficiency of PHES in the United States.
我们试图描述美国围产期HIV暴露监测(PHES)活动及相关规定的现状,并提出加强PHES的建议。
2014年,我们向50个州、哥伦比亚特区、波多黎各、美属维尔京群岛以及6个市县(伊利诺伊州芝加哥市;得克萨斯州休斯敦市;加利福尼亚州洛杉矶市;纽约州纽约市;宾夕法尼亚州费城市;加利福尼亚州旧金山市)的卫生部门发送了在线调查问卷。我们分析了59个辖区中56个(95%)的回复。
56个辖区中有33个(59%)报告开展了PHES并追踪婴儿以确定其感染状况。在开展PHES的33个辖区中,28个(85%)将母婴数据进行了关联,但只有12个(36%)确定了产后妇女的HIV护理状况。受访者关于加强PHES的建议主题集中在更新法律法规以支持PHES、报告所有HIV检测结果、将重要记录与PHES数据关联以识别和追踪HIV暴露婴儿、与医疗服务提供者沟通以改善报告、培训工作人员以及从经验丰富的辖区获取帮助以实施PHES。
我们的研究结果表明,通过当前系统收集的围产期暴露数据不足以全面监测和预防围产期HIV暴露及传播。需要全面的PHES数据收集和报告来维持在降低围产期HIV传播率方面所取得的进展。我们建议为围产期HIV暴露报告制定最低标准,以提高美国PHES的完整性、质量和效率。