Abstract

Objectives: Canadian epidemiologic data demonstrate the fallibility of established HIV testing approaches to reach, diagnose, and link to care a significant portion of the population thereby contributing to missed opportunities to reduce onward HIV transmission. Increasing and diversifying entry points to accessing HIV testing may be a successful strategy to reach people who remain undiagnosed. We sought to determine the perspectives of patients on the acceptability of an offer of routine non-targeted provider-initiated HIV counseling and point-of-care (POC) testing in the health services program of a Community Health Centre in downtown Ottawa, the capital of Canada.Methods: Patients aged 18 years and over accessing the Health Services Program for scheduled clinical appointments were approached by research staff with the offer of a POC HIV test with pre- and post-test counseling. All patients accepting the offer and those declining the offer were offered the opportunity to complete an Acceptability Questionnaire.Results: Questionnaire responses from eligible patients over four consecutive weeks in 2018 strongly endorse the acceptability of an offer of an HIV test in the context of their scheduled health services appointment for a separate clinical condition. This contention held both for those patients accepting the offer and proceeding to testing and for those patients declining the offer.Conclusions: The perspectives of the patients in our study demonstrate that a routine offer of non-targeted provider-initiated HIV counseling and POC testing was considered not only to be an acceptable, but also an appropriate and welcome intervention in a community health services program. These results suggest the potential for actively engaging more individuals—including those less likely to be engaged through a targeted testing approach—in the documented benefits of the HIV care and treatment cascade by increasing the HIV test offer through routine provider initiation. In addition, at the population level, shifting the offer through venue diversification, similarly shows potential for reducing engagement in ongoing HIV transmission behaviors and practices attributed to those unaware of their HIV positive status. Both outcomes fundamental to the goal of eliminating AIDS by 2030.

Highlights

  • Ongoing HIV transmission remains a significant challenge to the health of people in Canada

  • Of the estimated 75,500 people living with HIV in Canada in 2014, 21% were unaware of their infection

  • The latest data from Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) indicate a lower estimate of 14% of the 63,100 people living with HIV in Canada at the end of 2016; that is, one in every seven Canadians living with HIV had not been diagnosed, were unaware of their infection

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Summary

Introduction

Ongoing HIV transmission remains a significant challenge to the health of people in Canada. The considerable proportion over a number of years, of people in Canada unknowingly living with HIV suggests a failure of established Canadian testing approaches to reach, diagnose, and link to care a significant portion of the population, represents missed opportunities to reduce onward HIV transmission, and impedes Canada’s progress toward the 90-90-90 global targets established by UNAIDS and the World Health Organization [1]. Of the estimated 75,500 people living with HIV (including AIDS) in Canada in 2014, 21% were unaware of their infection. The latest data from PHAC indicate a lower estimate of 14% of the 63,100 people (plausible range 55,500–70,720) living with HIV (including AIDS) in Canada at the end of 2016; that is, one in every seven Canadians living with HIV had not been diagnosed, were unaware of their infection. PHAC cautions that as new infections are occurring at a rate greater than the number of deaths, the overall number of Canadians living with HIV is likely to increase in the years to come highlighting the need for innovative strategies to reach those people unaware of their HIV positive status [5]

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