Understanding the Targeting and Uptake of HIV Testing Among Gay and Bisexual Men Attending Sexual Health Clinics

被引:0
作者
Muhammad S. Jamil
Hamish McManus
Denton Callander
Garrett Prestage
Hammad Ali
Catherine C. O’Connor
Marcus Chen
Anna M. McNulty
Vickie Knight
Tim Duck
Phillip Keen
James Gray
Nick Medland
Margaret Hellard
David A. Lewis
Andrew E. Grulich
John M. Kaldor
Christopher K. Fairley
Basil Donovan
Rebecca J. Guy
机构
[1] UNSW Sydney,The Kirby Institute
[2] UNSW Sydney,Centre for Social Research in Health
[3] Sydney Local Health District,Sexual Health Service, Community Health
[4] University of Sydney,Central Clinical School
[5] Melbourne Sexual Health Centre,Central Clinical School
[6] Monash University,Sydney Sexual Health Centre
[7] Sydney Hospital,School of Public Health and Community Medicine
[8] UNSW Sydney,Centre for Population Health
[9] NSW Ministry of Health,Western Sydney Sexual Health Centre
[10] ACON,Marie Bashir Institute for Infectious Diseases & Biosecurity and Sydney Medical School
[11] Burnet Institute, Westmead
[12] Western Sydney Local Health District,undefined
[13] University of Sydney,undefined
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2018年 / 22卷
关键词
MSM; Gay men; High-risk; HIV; Testing; Sexual health clinics;
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学科分类号
摘要
We assessed trends in HIV testing outcomes during a period of clinic-based initiatives introduced to increase HIV testing among gay and bisexual men (GBM) attending sexual health clinics (SHCs) in New South Wales (NSW). A cohort of 25,487 HIV-negative GBM attending 32 SHCs in NSW (2009–2015) was classified into six sub-groups each year based on client-type (new/existing), risk-status (low/high-risk), and any recent HIV testing. Poisson regression methods were used to assess HIV testing outcomes in sub-groups of GBM. HIV testing outcomes and the sub-groups with greatest statistically significant annual increases were: individuals attending (26% in high-risk existing clients with recent testing); testing uptake (4% in low-risk existing clients with no recent testing); testing frequency (6% in low-risk existing clients with no recent testing and 5% in high-risk existing clients with recent testing); and total tests (31% in high-risk existing clients with recent testing). High-risk existing clients with recent testing had a 13% annual increase in the proportional contribution to total tests. Our findings show improved targeting of testing to high-risk GBM at NSW SHCs. The clinic-based initiatives should be considered for translation to other similar settings.
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页码:513 / 521
页数:8
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