|
|
Makerere University Research Repository >
College of Health Sciences >
School of Bio-Medical Sciences >
Research Articles (Bio-Medical) >
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1417
|
| Title: | Acceptance of routine testing for HIV among adult patients at the medical emergency unit at a national referral hospital in Kampala, Uganda |
| Authors: | Nakanjako, Damalie Kamya, Moses Kyabayinze, Daniel Mayanja-Kizza, Harriet Freers, Jurgen Whalen, Christopher Katabira, Elly |
| Keywords: | HIV testing HIV/AIDS Routine HIV-testing Mulago Hospital Acceptance Africa Uganda |
| Issue Date: | 2006 |
| Citation: | Nakanjako, D., Kamya, M., Kyabayinze, D., Mayanja-Kizza, H., Freers, J., Whalen, C., Katabira, E. (2006). Acceptance of routine testing for HIV among adult patients at the medical emergency unit at a national referral hospital in Kampala, Uganda. Aids Behavior |
| Abstract: | HIV testing is an entry point to comprehensive HIV/AIDS prevention and care. In Uganda, Routine Testing and Counseling for HIV (RTC) is not widely offered as part of standard medical care in acute
care settings. This study determined the acceptance of RTC in a medical emergency setting at Mulago national referral hospital. We interviewed 233 adult
patients who were offered HIV testing. Overall, 83% were unaware of their HIV serostatus and 88% of these had been to a health unit in the previous six
months. Of the 208 eligible for HIV testing, 95% accepted to test. Half the patients were HIV infected and 77% of these were diagnosed during the study. HIV testing was highly acceptable and detected a significant number of undiagnosed HIV infections. We recommend adoption of RTC as standard of care in the
medical emergency unit in order to scale HIV diagnosis and linkage to HIV/AIDS care. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1417 |
| Appears in Collections: | Research Articles (Bio-Medical)
|
Files in This Item:
| File |
Description |
Size | Format |
| Nakanjako-chs-res.pdf | | 142Kb | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
|
All items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved.
|