AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to compare the effectiveness of targeted rapid HIV screening using the Denver HIV Risk Score versus nontargeted screening methods in an urban emergency department and urgent care settings.
  • During the targeted screening phase, out of 28,506 patients, 551 were tested, resulting in 7 new HIV diagnoses, versus 3,591 tests during the nontargeted phase, which also identified 7 new cases among 29,510 patients.
  • The findings concluded that targeted screening significantly improved the identification of new HIV infections and required fewer tests to achieve the same number of diagnoses compared to nontargeted screening.

Article Abstract

Study Objective: A clinical prediction tool, the Denver HIV Risk Score, was recently developed to help identify patients with increased probability of undiagnosed HIV infection. Our goal was to compare targeted rapid HIV screening using the Denver HIV Risk Score to nontargeted rapid HIV screening in an urban emergency department (ED) and urgent care.

Methods: We used a prospective, before-after design at an urban medical center with an approximate annual census of 110,000 visits. Patients aged 13 years or older were eligible for screening. Targeted HIV screening of patients identified as high-risk by nurses using the Denver HIV Risk Score during medical screening was compared to nontargeted HIV screening offered by medical screening nurses during 2 separate 4-month time periods. The primary outcome was newly diagnosed HIV-infected patients.

Results: 28,506 patients presented during the targeted phase, 1,718 were identified as high-risk, and 551 completed HIV testing. Of these, 7 (1.3%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.5% to 2.6%) were newly diagnosed with HIV infection. 29,510 patients presented during the nontargeted phase and 3,591 completed HIV testing. Of these, 7 (0.2%, 95% CI 0.1% to 0.4%) were newly diagnosed with HIV infection. Targeted HIV screening was significantly associated with identification of newly diagnosed HIV infection when compared to nontargeted screening, adjusting for patient demographics and payer status (relative risk [RR] 10.4, 95% CI 3.4 to 32.0).

Conclusion: Targeted HIV screening using the Denver HIV Risk Score was strongly associated with new HIV diagnoses when compared to nontargeted screening. Although both HIV screening methods identified the same absolute number of newly diagnosed patients, significantly fewer tests were required during the targeted phase to achieve the same effect.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4730951PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2012.10.031DOI Listing

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