HIV Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effectiveness of Inpatient HIV Voluntary Counseling and Testing in Uganda
This study compared the effectiveness of inpatient routine VCT to referral for post-discharge VCT in terms of the number of new HIV infections identified, linkage to care for HIV infected individuals and reduction in HIV risk behavior.
Ambulatory HIV voluntary testing and counseling (VCT) has become a mainstay of HIV
prevention and linkage to care efforts. Despite expansion of these services in sub-Saharan
Africa, most individuals admitted for acute illnesses arrive in hospital unaware of their
HIV serostatus. Even then, inpatient risk reduction counseling services are not widely
available and utilization of HIV testing services in the hospital is rare; most HIV
diagnoses are made clinically without the benefit of counseling or antibody testing. The
effectiveness of VCT during hospitalization in high-prevalence, resource poor settings has
never been formally studied. It has been argued that the circumstances of hospitalization
for HIV-associated illness do not allow for the provision of VCT services in this setting:
Patients may be too sick to participate meaningfully in risk reduction counseling and the
inpatient medical management of acute illness may leave little time for the provision of
VCT. There are also several potentially significant differences between ambulatory and
inpatient VCT that may limit efficacy in the latter case. First, inpatient counseling during
an acute illness may not reduce risk behavior significantly due to competing priorities and
messages communicated to patients while in the hospital. Second, HIV risk behavior may
already be so infrequent among individuals with complications of advanced HIV disease that
there is little margin for further risk reduction. Third, providing VCT during acute
hospitalization may not result in effective linkage to existing outpatient follow-up medical
care or community-based support services. It may prove very difficult to bridge the gap
between the hospital setting and ongoing outpatient care resources. If this is not
accomplished, a major goal of the provision of inpatient VCT will be unmet.
This randomized trial compared the impact of free, routine, VCT during hospitalization for
acute illness at Mulago Hospital with referral for ambulatory VCT immediately following
hospital discharge (which was the current standard of care). We assessed HIV risk behavior
and linkage to care outcomes at 3 and 6 months. The following specific aims were addressed:
Aim 1: To determine the number of HIV infections newly identified by offering free VCT
routinely to hospitalized patients.
Aim 2: To determine whether routine VCT in hospitalized patients increases partner
disclosure and reduces risk behavior at 3 and 6 months.
Aim 3: To determine whether routine VCT in hospitalized patients increases linkage to
follow-up HIV care, including available opportunistic infection prophylaxis, antiretroviral
treatment, hospice services, and other community-based social services.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor)
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