Increased HIV Testing Will Modestly Reduce HIV Incidence among Gay Men in NSW and Would Be Acceptable if HIV Testing Becomes Convenient
Authored by Richard T Gray, Garrett P Prestage, Ian Down, Muhammad Haris Ghaus, Alexander Hoare, Jack Bradley, David P Wilson
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0055449
Sponsors:
Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Objective: Determine the acceptability and epidemiological impact of
increases in HIV testing in gay men in New South Wales (NSW), Australia-
particularly pertinent when considering treatment as prevention and the
need to reduce undiagnosed infections.
Methods: We conducted an online survey and focus groups to assess
whether increases in HIV testing would be acceptable to gay men in NSW.
In parallel, we assessed the potential impact of increases in testing
coverage and/or frequency using an individual-based model of HIV
transmission.
Results: If sexual practices and the rate of initiating HIV treatment
are unchanged then increasing HIV testing reduces infections. Increasing
testing frequency has the largest impact, with a 13.8\% reduction in HIV
infections over 10 years if the similar to 55-75\% of men who test at
least once per year increased their testing frequency to four times per
year. If testing levels decrease from current levels then we expect an
increase in HIV infections with a sharply rising trend over time.
Increasing HIV testing would be acceptable if testing was more
convenient. However, only similar to 25\% of men surveyed were `very
likely' to increase their level of HIV testing. Men delayed or avoided
testing due to the slowness in obtaining results and if they believed
they had not put themselves at risk.
Conclusions: An increase in HIV testing alone is unlikely to reduce HIV
incidence substantially in NSW gay men-however, the relatively high
testing levels need to continue to prevent an increase in HIV
infections. In jurisdictions with lower levels of HIV testing, increases
in testing coverage and frequency are likely to have a larger impact.
Successful treatment as prevention interventions will require increases
in testing rates; such increases would be acceptable to gay men in NSW
but only if more convenient testing and rapid communication of results
were available.
Tags
Infection
Risk
Australia
Sex
Homosexual-men
Sydney
Cohort