HIV Infections Clinical Trial
Official title:
Qualitative Assessment of Implementing Routine Rapid HIV Testing
Qualitative assessment of implementing routine HIV rapid testing in primary care clinics within VA
Background:
During the past three decades, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) have caused extensive illness and death in the United
States. Since the advent of the HIV epidemic, the VA healthcare system has been
significantly impacted. Veterans are at much higher HIV risk than the general population. In
addition, a significant proportion of VA patients are members of minority groups, and are
homeless, both patient categories which have also been linked to high HIV prevalence.
Because the VA is the largest provider of HIV treatment in the US, it is imperative that
researchers develop innovative methods to 1) identify HIV-positive individuals, 2) provide
them with the knowledge of their HIV-positive status; 3) do so early enough in the disease
so that patients can be placed into care, so that antiretroviral therapies can be effective,
and the HIV epidemic can be slowed and reversed.
Current HIV testing methods have been highly ineffective in this regard, due in large
measure to the method itself. Conventional HIV testing requires both a blood draw and
laboratory analysis, requiring a patient to schedule a future visit to receive results.
Consequently, a significant number of people simply do not return for their test results.
Current HIV prevalence figures bear this out. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) estimates that of the 1.2 million HIV infected persons in the US, as many as 1/3 are
unaware of their infection. Indeed, the CDC now recommends routine HIV testing for all
Americans. This recommendation was predicated on the evidence that moving from a risk-based,
to a routine testing model is one of the most effective ways to significantly increase
testing rates. As better HIV identification systems begin to spread through the VHA, the VHA
must determine the proper place for broader routine HIV rapid testing programs in their
delivery systems. Demonstrating effectiveness is only the first step. To make policy
recommendations, we must better understand the challenges of implementing a testing system
that would apply to all, not just at-risk patients.
The move toward routine HIV testing, combined with a novel diagnostic tool (rapid testing)
although highly effective, provides many implementation challenges. For example, what are
the unintended adverse consequences in implementing NRT? What are the barriers and
facilitators to implementation? How important are local nursing and physician champions and
opinion leaders? These issues are of paramount importance in reaching an evidence-based
consensus as to what a 'best practices' approach could look like within a large,
decentralized healthcare organization like VA.
Objectives:
The specific aims of this project then, are:
1. To develop generalized qualitative methods and instruments which can be used to
evaluate VA HIV rapid testing implementation efforts;
2. To employ these developed instruments to qualitatively document the implementation of
our previously successful NRT strategy for spreading NRT to VA primary/urgent care
practice at our downtown Los Angeles Outpatient Clinic (OPC);
3. To explore and document barriers, facilitators, and unintended consequences of
implementing our NRT model of HIV testing at LAOPC.
Methods:
We used qualitative methods to conduct formative and process evaluations which allowed us to
fully assess our research objective, which were:
A thorough examination, exploration and description of the barriers and facilitators to
implementing NRT at the Los Angeles Outpatient Clinic (OPC).
Status:
project objectives completed; manuscript being developed
;
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