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Benchmarks for HIV Testing: What Is Needed to Achieve Universal Testing Coverage at U.S. Ambulatory Healthcare Facilities

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Date 2020 Nov 2
PMID 33136820
Citations 2
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Abstract

Background: Black and Hispanic men have the highest rates of HIV diagnoses. To decrease the number of U.S. men who are unaware of their HIV status, they should be tested at least once. Our objective was to estimate the increases needed in HIV testing rates at ambulatory health care visits to achieve universal coverage.

Methods: We analyzed nationally representative medical record abstraction data to estimate the number of visits per person to physician offices, emergency departments, and outpatient clinics among men aged 18-39 years during 2009-2016, and the percentage of visits with an HIV test. We calculated the increase in the percentage of visits with an HIV test needed to achieve universal testing coverage of men by age 39 years.

Results: Men had a mean of 75.3 million ambulatory visits per year and 1.67 visits per person. An HIV test was performed at 0.9% of the ambulatory visits made by white men, 2.5% by black men, and 2.4% by Hispanic men. A 3-fold increase in the percentage of visits with an HIV test would result in coverage of 46.2% of white, 100% of black, and 100% of Hispanic men; an 11-fold increase would be needed to result in coverage of 100% of white men.

Conclusions: HIV testing rates of men at ambulatory health care visits were too low to provide HIV testing coverage of all men by aged 39 years. A 3-fold increase in the percentage of visits with an HIV test would result in universal testing coverage of black and Hispanic men by age 39 years.

Citing Articles

Benefits of Frequent HIV Testing in the THRIVE Demonstration Project: United States, 2015-2020.

Kimball A, Zhu W, Yu L, Tanner M, Iqbal K, Dominguez K Am J Public Health. 2023; 113(9):1019-1027.

PMID: 37410983 PMC: 10413751. DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2023.307341.


HIV Testing Trends Among Persons with Commercial Insurance or Medicaid - United States, 2014-2019.

Henny K, Zhu W, Huang Y, Townes A, Delaney K, Hoover K MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2021; 70(25):905-909.

PMID: 34166332 PMC: 8224865. DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm7025a1.