Establishment of a national surveillance system to monitor community HIV testing, Ireland, 2018.

Community HIV testing monitoring HIV International protection applicants Ireland Men who have sex with men Point-of-care testing Surveillance

Journal

Irish journal of medical science
ISSN: 1863-4362
Titre abrégé: Ir J Med Sci
Pays: Ireland
ID NLM: 7806864

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Nov 2020
Historique:
received: 02 01 2020
accepted: 14 03 2020
pubmed: 3 4 2020
medline: 18 11 2020
entrez: 3 4 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

HIV continues to be an important public health issue. Voluntary community-based HIV testing (VCBT) helps to reduce the undiagnosed population of HIV-positive individuals, enabling early diagnosis and treatment. Monitoring is essential to determine whether at-risk groups are being effectively reached. Our aim was to pilot and then introduce sustained monitoring of VCBT in Ireland, through collaboration between statutory and non-statutory organisations. The study was initiated by the Health Protection Surveillance Centre in 2018. Steps included forming a multisectoral steering group and developing a minimum standardised dataset. De-identified case-based data were requested for VCBT carried out from 1 January 2017 onwards; this paper includes data for 2018. Six organisations participated; all four NGOs involved in VCBT, one medical charity, and the Health Service Executive National Social Inclusion Office. Methods were rapid point-of-care testing (POCT) (54%) or laboratory based (46%). Total HIV test reactivity was 1.7% (1.5% excluding persons later identified as previously diagnosed HIV positive). All POCT data were case based; the test reactivity rate was 0.8% and was higher in bar/club settings (1.2%). Most (74%) laboratory testing data were in aggregate format; the test positivity rate in one asylum centre was 5.0%. Ongoing challenges include testing among persons later identified as previously diagnosed HIV positive, monitoring case-based testing in asylum settings, and suboptimal data on confirmatory testing and linkage to care. Sustained national monitoring in community settings will help inform HIV testing guidelines and will enable assessment of the impact of local and regional community HIV testing strategies.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
HIV continues to be an important public health issue. Voluntary community-based HIV testing (VCBT) helps to reduce the undiagnosed population of HIV-positive individuals, enabling early diagnosis and treatment. Monitoring is essential to determine whether at-risk groups are being effectively reached.
AIMS OBJECTIVE
Our aim was to pilot and then introduce sustained monitoring of VCBT in Ireland, through collaboration between statutory and non-statutory organisations.
METHODS METHODS
The study was initiated by the Health Protection Surveillance Centre in 2018. Steps included forming a multisectoral steering group and developing a minimum standardised dataset. De-identified case-based data were requested for VCBT carried out from 1 January 2017 onwards; this paper includes data for 2018.
RESULTS RESULTS
Six organisations participated; all four NGOs involved in VCBT, one medical charity, and the Health Service Executive National Social Inclusion Office. Methods were rapid point-of-care testing (POCT) (54%) or laboratory based (46%). Total HIV test reactivity was 1.7% (1.5% excluding persons later identified as previously diagnosed HIV positive). All POCT data were case based; the test reactivity rate was 0.8% and was higher in bar/club settings (1.2%). Most (74%) laboratory testing data were in aggregate format; the test positivity rate in one asylum centre was 5.0%. Ongoing challenges include testing among persons later identified as previously diagnosed HIV positive, monitoring case-based testing in asylum settings, and suboptimal data on confirmatory testing and linkage to care.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Sustained national monitoring in community settings will help inform HIV testing guidelines and will enable assessment of the impact of local and regional community HIV testing strategies.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32240479
doi: 10.1007/s11845-020-02217-3
pii: 10.1007/s11845-020-02217-3
doi:

Types de publication

Historical Article Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1507-1514

Auteurs

Melissa Brady (M)

Health Service Executive (HSE), Health Protection Surveillance Centre, Dublin, Ireland. Melissa.brady1@hse.ie.

Adam Shanley (A)

HIV Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.

Caroline Hurley (C)

Health Service Executive (HSE), Sexual Health and Crisis Pregnancy Programme (SHCPP), Dublin, Ireland.

Kate O'Donnell (K)

Health Service Executive (HSE), Health Protection Surveillance Centre, Dublin, Ireland.

Maitiu O'Tuathail (M)

Safetynet Primary Care, Dublin, Ireland.

Margaret Fitzgerald (M)

Health Service Executive (HSE), National Social Inclusion Office, Dublin, Ireland.

Cillian Flynn (C)

Gender, Orientation, Sexual Health and HIV (GOSHH), Limerick, Ireland.

Richard Carson (R)

AIDS Care, Education and Training (ACET) Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.

Derval Igoe (D)

Health Service Executive (HSE), Health Protection Surveillance Centre, Dublin, Ireland.

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