High accuracy of home-based community rapid HIV testing in rural Malawi.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the performance of rapid HIV antibody tests when used as part of a home-based community wide counseling and testing strategy in northern Malawi. DESIGN: A cross-sectional population survey of HIV infection, 2007 to 2008. METHODS: Adults aged 15 years or older in a demographic surveillance area were counseled and then offered an HIV test at their home by government-certified counselors. Two initial rapid tests (Determine and Uni-Gold) were performed on all samples and a third, tie-breaker test (SD Bioline) used to resolve discordant results. All people who wanted to know were posttest-counseled and informed of their results with referral to local clinical services if found to be HIV-positive. Laboratory quality control comprised retesting all positive and every tenth negative venous blood sample collected. RESULTS: A total of 10,819 adults provided venous blood samples for HIV testing, of whom 7.5% (813) were HIV-positive. The accuracy of the parallel testing strategy used was high with 99.6% sensitivity, 100.0% specificity, 99.9% positive predictive value, and 99.9% negative predictive value. CONCLUSION: Face-to-face rapid testing by health personnel with minimum training at the client's home performs well when used on a wide scale in the community setting.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | HIV serodiagnosis, quality control, home care, population surveillance, Malawi, POPULATION, COUNTRIES, ANTIBODY, TRIALS, UGANDA, COST |
ISI | 284147500016 |
Explore Further
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3248920 (OA Location)
- 10.1097/QAI.0b013e3181f98628 (DOI)
- 21934554 (PubMed)