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Automated Substance Use/Sexual Risk Reporting and HIV Test Acceptance Among Emergency Department Patients Aged 13-24 Years

Overview
Journal AIDS Behav
Date 2021 Oct 27
PMID 34705152
Citations 4
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Abstract

Despite federal guidelines, many adolescents and emerging adults are not offered HIV testing by their healthcare providers. As such, many-including those who may be at high-risk for contracting HIV given their sexual and/or substance use risk-are not routinely tested. The current study examines sexual risk and substance use among emergency department patients aged 13-24 years (n = 147), who completed an automated screening as part of a tablet-based intervention designed to increase HIV testing. Twenty seven percent (n = 39) of participants chose to test for HIV after completing the tablet-based intervention. Among this sample, sexual risk was a significant independent predictor of HIV testing (χ = 16.50, p < 0.001). Problem substance use (e.g. trying but failing to quit) also predicted testing (χ = 7.43, p < 0.01). When considering these behaviors together, analyses indicated that the effect of problem substance use (ß = 0.648, p = 0.154) on testing is explained by sexual risk behavior (ß = 1.425, p < 0.01). The study's findings underscore the value of using routine automated risk screenings to collect sensitive data from emergency department patients, followed by computer-based HIV test offers for adolescent youth. Our research indicates tablet-based interventions can facilitate more accurate reporting of sexual behavior and substance use, and can also potentially increase HIV test uptake among those at risk.

Citing Articles

A Nationally Representative Analysis of Substance Use and Sexual Health Correlates Associated with HIV and STI Testing among Adolescents.

Weerakoon S, Srikanth N, Aivadyan C, Takenaka B, Rose R, Rutledge J AIDS Behav. 2024; 29(3):919-932.

PMID: 39661294 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-024-04575-w.


Using the participatory education and research into lived experience (PEARLE) methodology to localize content and target specific populations.

Aronson I, Bennett A, Ardouin-Guerrier M, Rivera-Castellar G, Gibson B, Vargas-Estrella B Front Digit Health. 2022; 4:992519.

PMID: 36339513 PMC: 9634163. DOI: 10.3389/fdgth.2022.992519.


"I Didn't Know What They're Gonna Do to Me: So That's Why I Said No": Why Youth Decline HIV Testing in Emergency Departments.

Ibitoye M, Bennett A, Des Jarlais D, Bugaighis M, Chernick L, Aronson I Behav Med. 2022; 50(1):47-54.

PMID: 35904104 PMC: 9884312. DOI: 10.1080/08964289.2022.2100864.


How Vaccine Ambivalence Can Lead People Who Inject Drugs to Decline COVID-19 Vaccination and Ways This Can Be Addressed: Qualitative Study.

Aronson I, Bennett A, Ardouin-Guerrier M, Rivera-Castellar G, Gibson B, Santoscoy S JMIR Form Res. 2022; 6(3):e35066.

PMID: 35191841 PMC: 8945077. DOI: 10.2196/35066.

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