HIV screening and linkage to care in a health department in Valencia,Spain: Lessons learned from a healthcare quality improvement project |
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Authors: | Enrique Ortega-Gonzalez,Marí a Martí nez-Roma,Marí a Dolores Ocete,Concepció n Jimeno,Antonio Fornos,Amparo Esteban,Magdalena Martinez,Carmen Valero,Neus Gó mez-Muñ oz,Alba Carrodeguas,Diogo Medina,Miguel Garcia-Deltoro |
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Affiliation: | a Fundació Investigació Hospital General Universitari Valencia, Valencia, Spain;b Departament Hospital General València, Valencia, Spain;c Gilead Sciences, Madrid, Spain. |
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Abstract: | Spain’s rate of new human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) diagnoses exceeds that of the European Economic Area average (8.6 vs 5.6:100,000 in 2018). The country has failed to meet the first of United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) 90-90-90 targets for HIV control by 2020, with 87.0% of people living with HIV knowing their status, and late presentation rates of 47.6% and 51.5% country-wide and in the Valencian autonomous community, respectively. Advancing screening and linkage to care (SLTC) practices is necessary to effectively control the epidemic. The Valencia Viral Screening (CRIVALVIR) project adopted the TEST model for opportunistic and systematic HIV SLTC in individuals aged 18 to 80 who required blood work for any purpose, as of February 2019. SLTC was integrated into routine clinical workflow across primary care centers serving a population of 360,000 people in Valencia, Spain. Our project successfully upscaled total HIV testing by 194% to over 32,000 patients tested in 14 months. We found an overall prevalence of 0.13% (0.08–0.21) among those screened per protocol (n = 13,061), with foreign-born citizens presenting a 12.5 times significantly higher likelihood of acquiring HIV (95% confidence interval 4.63–33.96, P < .0001). We improved late presentation by 18.2 percentage points and prevented an estimated 58 to 70 new secondary infections. HIV screening of the general population in primary care is an effective strategy for achieving timely diagnosis and preventing new infections. Opportunistic, systematic, opt-out approaches are essential to control the HIV epidemic. |
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Keywords: | HIV late diagnosis linkage to care prevention screening |
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