Abstract

BackgroundWe examine the uptake of HIV Testing and Counselling (HTC) and linkage into care over one year of providing HTC through community and health facility testing modalities among people living in Kibera informal urban settlement in Nairobi Kenya.MethodsWe analyzed program data on health facility-based HIV testing and counselling and community- based testing and counselling approaches for the period starting October 2013 to September 2014. Univariate and bivariate analysis methods were used to compare the two approaches with regard to uptake of HTC and subsequent linkage to care. The exact Confidence Intervals (CI) to the proportions were approximated using simple normal approximation to binomial distribution method.ResultsMajority of the 18,591 clients were tested through health facility-based testing approaches 72.5 % (n = 13485) vs those tested through community-based testing comprised 27.5 % (n = 5106). More clients tested at health facilities were reached through Provider Initiated Testing and Counselling PITC 81.7 % (n = 11015) while 18.3 % were reached through Voluntary Counselling and Testing (VCT)/Client Initiated Testing and Counselling (CITC) services. All clients who tested positive during health facility-based testing were successfully linked to care either at the project sites or sites of client choice while not all who tested positive during community based testing were linked to care. The HIV prevalence among all those who were tested for HIV in the program was 5.2 % (n = 52, 95 % CI: 3.9 %–6.8 %). Key study limitation included use of aggregate data to report uptake of HTC through the two testing approaches and not being able to estimate the population in the catchment area likely to test for HIV.ConclusionHealth facility-based HTC approach achieved more clients tested for HIV, and this method also resulted in identifying greater numbers of people who were HIV positive in Kibera slum within one year period of testing for HIV compared to community-based HTC approach. Linking HIV positive clients to care proved much easier during health facility- based HTC compared to community- based HTC.

Highlights

  • We examine the uptake of HIV Testing and Counselling (HTC) and linkage into care over one year of providing HTC through community and health facility testing modalities among people living in Kibera informal urban settlement in Nairobi Kenya

  • Evening hours testing and weekend testing were organized by pitching tents at strategic locations within Kibera informal settlement and Community Health Volunteers (CHVs) tasked with informing the public of the availability of the services in their neighborhoods

  • Majority were tested through health facility-based testing approaches 72.5 % (n = 13485) compared to those tested through community-based testing approach 27.5 % (n = 5106)

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Summary

Introduction

We examine the uptake of HIV Testing and Counselling (HTC) and linkage into care over one year of providing HTC through community and health facility testing modalities among people living in Kibera informal urban settlement in Nairobi Kenya. HIV continues to be a major global public health issue having claimed more than 39 million lives [1]. Sub-Saharan Africa continues to be the most affected region with the HIV epidemic, accounting for about 71 % (24.7 million) of people living with HIV globally [2]. Millions of people have become aware of their HIV status through VCT and further linked to HIV prevention and care services. In an effort to expand access to prevention and care amenities, World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines recommend a combination of strategically selected delivery models to provide HTC. Such models include community-based HTC, facility HTC, self-testing, work-place testing and couple testing. No solitary delivery model will serve all who could benefit from HTC in a given setting or country [4]

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