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Comparative Study
. 2007 Jun;4(6):e194.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0040194.

Costs and consequences of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's recommendations for opt-out HIV testing

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Costs and consequences of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's recommendations for opt-out HIV testing

David R Holtgrave. PLoS Med. 2007 Jun.

Abstract

Background: The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently recommended opt-out HIV testing (testing without the need for risk assessment and counseling) in all health care encounters in the US for persons 13-64 years old. However, the overall costs and consequences of these recommendations have not been estimated before. In this paper, I estimate the costs and public health impact of opt-out HIV testing relative to testing accompanied by client-centered counseling, and relative to a more targeted counseling and testing strategy.

Methods and findings: Basic methods of scenario and cost-effectiveness analysis were used, from a payer's perspective over a one-year time horizon. I found that for the same programmatic cost of US$864,207,288, targeted counseling and testing services (at a 1% HIV seropositivity rate) would be preferred to opt-out testing: targeted services would newly diagnose more HIV infections (188,170 versus 56,940), prevent more HIV infections (14,553 versus 3,644), and do so at a lower gross cost per infection averted (US$59,383 versus US$237,149). While the study is limited by uncertainty in some input parameter values, the findings were robust across a variety of assumptions about these parameter values (including the estimated HIV seropositivity rate in the targeted counseling and testing scenario).

Conclusions: While opt-out testing may be able to newly diagnose over 56,000 persons living with HIV in one year, abandoning client-centered counseling has real public health consequences in terms of HIV infections that could have been averted. Further, my analyses indicate that even when HIV seropositivity rates are as low as 0.3%, targeted counseling and testing performs better than opt-out testing on several key outcome variables. These analytic findings should be kept in mind as HIV counseling and testing policies are debated in the US.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The author has declared that no competing interests exist.

Comment in

References

    1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Revised recommendations for HIV testing of adults, adolescents, and pregnant women in health-care settings. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2006;55:1–18. - PubMed
    1. American Medical Association. AMA welcomes new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommendations for routine HIV testing. 2006. Available: http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/category/16871.html. Accessed 4 May 2007.
    1. American Civil Liberties Union. ACLU says new CDC HIV testing recommendations raise health and civil liberties concerns. 2006. Available: http://www.aclu.org/hiv/testing/26819prs20060921.html. Accessed 4 May 2007.
    1. National Association of People with AIDS. National Association of People with AIDS supports routinely offered and voluntary HIV Counseling, testing, and referral services. 2006. Available: http://www.napwa.org/documents/routine_testing_counseling.pdf. Accessed 4 May 2007.
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