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Published byDominick McDonald Modified over 9 years ago
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A prioritisation tool for HIV testing in primary care in Leeds Duncan Cooper, Owen Brigstock-Baron, Brenda Fullard and Richard Dixon - NHS Leeds Antony Hale – Leeds Teaching Hospital Trust Leena Inamdar – West Yorkshire Health Protection Unit June 2012
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Late diagnosis of HIV infection In the UK c24% of those living with HIV remain undiagnosed 40% of new cases have a late diagnosis (CD4count<350mm 3 ) – [65% for the Black African community] Late diagnosis leads to: poorer health and treatment outcomes increased mortality in those with HIV infection increased likelihood of onward transmission
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New diagnoses of HIV in Leeds (2005 – 2010)
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Epidemiology - Mixed picture Rate of new diagnosesProbable infection route of new diagnoses 25-43yrs 35-44yrs
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Barriers to HIV testing Patient: Poor awareness of risk Fear of + result Fears over confidentiality Fear of deportation/criminal charges Professional: Concerns over appearing judgemental Fear of giving positive result Incorrect perception of a patient’s risk Lack of time/resources Organisational Lack of incentives to offer test No formal national targets Financial constraints Community Stigma
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NICE guidance 2011 Two pieces of NICE public health guidance were published in March 2011: [1] Increasing uptake of HIV uptake among Black Africans in England [2] Increasing uptake of HIV uptake among men who have sex with men
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Recommended: - ‘Normalising’ HIV testing - Increase amount/regularity of testing within high risk groups - Increasing health care settings within which tests are offered NICE guidance 2011
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Threshold for increasing HIV testing “in areas with a HIV prevalence of above 2 per 1,000 all new primary care registrations and general medical admissions should be offered an HIV test, as well as anyone who has a blood test (regardless of the reason)”. Leeds has a HIV prevalence of 1.4 per 1000
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HIV rate per 1,000 in Leeds (2010) [based on number of HIV+ patients accessing care]
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Data analysis 1.Take data about HIV tests from LTHT laboratory 2.Clean the data 3.Calculate HIV test rates by GP practice 4.Compare against underlying HIV prevalence using HPA data using a GIS
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Rank practices from low to high ‘testers’ for all high prevalence practices
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Application Prioritisation and surveillance tool for primary care HIV testing, used to inform: – Training for GPs (STIF training) – Circulated to CCGS / evidence for commissioning – GP attitude survey – Input to cost-benefit analysis – Inform on-going HIV surveillance in Leeds
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Learning points Multi-agency working Data – very dirty - previously unused for this purpose Multiple formats Slow burner (worked between training locations)
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