Background: Case identification remains a challenge to reaching the United Nations 95-95-95 targets for children with HIV. Although the World Health Organization approved oral mucosal HIV self-testing (HIVST) for children older than 2 years in 2019, there is little information on HIVST for pediatric case identification in Ethiopia.
Setting: Nine health facilities across Ethiopia.
Methods: We implemented a pilot program from November 2021 to April 2022 to assess acceptability and feasibility of using HIVST to screen children 2-14 years of adult index clients, (ie, parents/caregivers living with HIV and on antiretroviral therapy). HIV-positive adults who had children with unknown HIV status were given HIVST kits (OraQuick) to screen their children at home. Parents/caregivers were asked to report results telephonically and bring children screening positive to the health facility for confirmatory HIV testing. We defined HIVST acceptability as ≥50% of parents/caregivers accepting testing and ≥50% reporting results within 7 days of receiving a test kit. Feasibility was defined as ≥60% of children with a reactive HIVST receiving confirmatory testing and <5 serious social harms reported per 1000 kits distributed.
Results: Overall, 1496 of 1651 (91%) parents/caregivers accepted HIVST kits to test their children at home and 1204 (71%) reported results within 7 days. Of 17 children (1%) with reactive results, 13 (76%) received confirmatory testing; of which 7 (54%) were confirmed to be HIV positive. One serious social harm was reported.
Conclusions: Providing adult parents/caregivers with HIVST kits to screen their children at home is an acceptable and feasible strategy to reach untested children and improve pediatric case finding in a low prevalence setting.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11623372 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/QAI.0000000000003533 | DOI Listing |
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