jueves, 3 de enero de 2019

HIV self-testing alone or with additional interventions, including financial incentives, and linkage to care or prevention among male partners of antenatal care clinic attendees in Malawi: An adaptive multi-arm, multi-stage cluster randomised trial

HIV self-testing alone or with additional interventions, including financial incentives, and linkage to care or prevention among male partners of antenatal care clinic attendees in Malawi: An adaptive multi-arm, multi-stage cluster randomised trial

Morning Rounds

Megan Thielking



How pregnant women could play a role in HIV screening for men

New research suggests that pregnant women could play a role in reaching men who might need to be screened for HIV. The study looked at more than 2,300 women receiving pregnancy-related care in urban Malawi. They were given either a letter for their male partner to visit an HIV clinic, self-testing kits to take home to their partners, or kits along with a financial incentive for visiting a clinic. Men who received self-testing kits were much more likely to head to a clinic within a month."Pregnancy and the postpartum period are times of unusually high HIV risk for both partners as well as the child," the authors write, and the interventions studied could represent a "promising new approach" to address that risk. 

HIV self-testing alone or with additional interventions, including financial incentives, and linkage to care or prevention among male partners of antenatal care clinic attendees in Malawi: An adaptive multi-arm, multi-stage cluster randomised trial

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