4.1 Article

Community-based rapid HIV testing in homeless and marginally housed adults in San Francisco

Journal

HIV MEDICINE
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 28-31

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-1293.2007.00423.x

Keywords

access to care; HIV/AIDS; homelessness; substance abuse; urban health

Funding

  1. NIAAA NIH HHS [AA 015287] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIMH NIH HHS [R01 MH054907, R01 MH 54907] Funding Source: Medline

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Background Standard two-step HIV testing is limited by poor return-for-results rates and misses high-risk individuals who do not access conventional testing facilities. Methods We describe a community-based rapid HIV testing programme in which homeless and marginally housed adults recruited from shelters, free meal programmes and single room occupancy hotels in San Francisco received OraQuick Rapid HIV-1 Antibody testing (OraSure Technologies, Bethlehem, PA, USA). Results Over 8 months, 1614 adults were invited to participate and 1213 (75.2%) underwent testing. HIV seroprevalence was 15.4% (187 of 1213 individuals) overall and 3.5% (37 of 1063) amongst high-risk individuals reporting no previous testing, a prior negative test, or previous testing without result disclosure. All 1213 participants received their results. Of 30 newly diagnosed persons who received confirmatory results, 26 (86.7%) reported at least one contact with a primary healthcare provider in the 6 months following diagnosis. Conclusions We conclude that community-based rapid testing is feasible, acceptable and effective based on the numbers of high-risk persons tested over a short period, the participation rate, the prevalence of new infection, the rate of result disclosure, and the proportion linked to care.

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