Last data update: Mar 10, 2025. (Total: 48852 publications since 2009)
Records 1-16 (of 16 Records) |
Query Trace: Tomlinson H[original query] |
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Xylazine use among people who inject drugs, Philadelphia 2022
Tan M , Nassau T , Kuncio D , Higgins D , Teixeira da Silva D , Tomlinson D , Brady KA . J Addict Med 2024 OBJECTIVES: Xylazine is commonly mixed with illicit opioids in Philadelphia, and potential associations with wound issues, infectious diseases, and overdoses are of public health concern. We used data from the National HIV Behavioral Surveillance Survey among persons who inject drugs (PWIDs) in Philadelphia to better identify individuals at risk and inform patients and clinicians about xylazine risk factors. METHODS: We compared characteristics of participants who reported using xylazine to those who reported not using xylazine in the past 12 months. Among those who reported xylazine use, we compared characteristics between people who prefer and did not prefer to use xylazine. RESULTS: In this sample of PWIDs, most prefer not to use xylazine, yet use is common. Compared with PWIDs not using xylazine, PWIDs who use xylazine were more likely to have recent homelessness, polysubstance use, overdose history, and hepatitis C virus infection (P < 0.05 for all comparisons). Compared with concordant xylazine use, discordant xylazine use was associated with lower preference for fentanyl, heroin as the primary injection drug, and lower use of syringe service programs (P < 0.05 for all comparisons). CONCLUSIONS: Public health entities should prioritize studying the use and health effects of xylazine in their jurisdictions and consider supporting point-of-care and drug-checking surveillance in addition to raising awareness of xylazine in the drug supply. |
Vital Signs: Progress toward eliminating HIV as a global public health threat through scale-up of antiretroviral therapy and health system strengthening supported by the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief - Worldwide, 2004-2022
Chun HM , Dirlikov E , Cox MH , Sherlock MW , Obeng-Aduasare Y , Sato K , Voetsch AC , Ater AD , Romano ER , Tomlinson H , Modi S , Achrekar A , Nkengasong J . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2023 72 (12) 317-324 INTRODUCTION: In 2004, the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), with CDC as a major U.S. government implementing agency, began providing HIV antiretroviral therapy (ART) worldwide. Through suppression of HIV viral load, effective ART reduces morbidity and mortality among persons with HIV infection and prevents vertical and sexual transmission. METHODS: To describe program impact, data were analyzed from all PEPFAR programs and from six countries that have conducted nationally representative Population-based HIV Impact Assessment (PHIA) surveys, including PEPFAR programmatic data on the number of persons with HIV infection receiving PEPFAR-supported ART (2004-2022), rates of viral load coverage (the proportion of eligible persons with HIV infection who received a viral load test) and viral load suppression (proportion of persons who received a viral load test with <1,000 HIV copies per mL of blood) (2015-2022), and population viral load suppression rates in six countries that had two PHIA surveys conducted during 2015-2021. To assess health system strengthening, data on workforce and laboratory systems were analyzed. RESULTS: By September 2022, approximately 20 million persons with HIV infection in 54 countries were receiving PEPFAR-supported ART (62% CDC-supported); this number increased 300-fold from the 66,550 reported in September 2004. During 2015-2022, viral load coverage more than tripled, from 24% to 80%, and viral load suppression increased from 80% to 95%. Despite increases in viral load suppression rates and health system strengthening investments, variability exists in viral load coverage among some subpopulations (children aged <10 years, males, pregnant women, men who have sex with men [MSM], persons in prisons and other closed settings [persons in prisons], and transgender persons) and in viral load suppression among other subpopulations (pregnant and breastfeeding women, persons in prisons, and persons aged <20 years). CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLIC HEALTH PRACTICE: Since 2004, PEPFAR has scaled up effective ART to approximately 20 million persons with HIV infection in 54 countries. To eliminate HIV as a global public health threat, achievements must be sustained and expanded to reach all subpopulations. CDC and PEPFAR remain committed to tackling HIV while strengthening public health systems and global health security. |
Notes from the field: Burkholderia pseudomallei detected in a raccoon carcass linked to a multistate aromatherapy-associated melioidosis outbreak - Texas, 2022
Petras JK , Elrod MG , Ty M , Adams P , Zahner D , Adams A , Calfee MW , Tomlinson C , Serre S , Ryan S , Jakabhazy E , Gee JE , Weiner Z , Bower WA , Negron ME , Hoffmaster AR , Honza H . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2022 71 (50) 1597-1598 Burkholderia pseudomallei, the causative agent of melioidosis, is an environmental gram-negative bacterium endemic in tropical and subtropical regions worldwide. B. pseudomallei can infect humans and a wide range of animals through percutaneous inoculation, inhalation, or ingestion (1). Melioidosis symptoms are nonspecific and vary widely because B. pseudomallei can infect any organ of the body, including the brain. In October 2021, the source of a multistate outbreak of melioidosis that involved four human cases in Georgia, Kansas, Minnesota, and Texas was identified as an aromatherapy room spray imported from India* (2). | | After the discovery of the aromatherapy spray as the outbreak source, the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) learned that a previously healthy pet raccoon, owned by the family of the Texas patient, had broken a bottle of the implicated aromatherapy spray and walked through the liquid. On April 3, 2021, approximately 2 weeks after this exposure, the raccoon displayed acute neurologic symptoms consistent with neurologic melioidosis† and died from an undetermined cause 3 days later. The carcass was wrapped in a cloth robe and buried on the family’s property. The strain found in the aromatherapy bottle (ATS2021) and linked to the outbreak contained a genetic variant, the bimABm allele, which is a virulence factor associated with neurologic melioidosis (3). |
Supporting parents of adolescents: a powerful and under-utilised opportunity to influence adolescent development
Skeen S , Ahmad JH , Bachman G , Cluver L , Gardner F , Madrid B , Miller K , Tomlinson M , Sherr L , Levy M . Vulnerable Child Youth Stud 2022 18 (1) 1-9 Throughout the rapid and intense changes that adolescents experience, their parents retain important influence over how they interact with the complex factors that shape their development. How parents care for their adolescent children has a deep and lasting impact on their well-being and development. Yet, parents often require support to meet their own and their adolescent children’s needs, which can be achieved through parenting support programmes. Parenting support programmes are delivered to parents of younger children across different contexts and populations, but the benefit of these programmes for parents of adolescents is not well-recognised or prioritised. Given the clear need for these interventions during adolescence and the substantial evidence for effectiveness in this age group, it is time to move the field forward. Increased resources to support parents of adolescents would maximise adolescents’ developmental potential and promote their well-being. We highlight four pressing areas for action: including parents of adolescents in parenting initiatives; involving parents in adolescent programming; strengthening efforts to address poverty and inequality, violence, and gender inequality; and engaging in strategic research to intensify the impact of programming. © 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. |
Identification of a rapidly-spreading triple mutant for high-level metabolic insecticide resistance in Anopheles gambiae provides a real-time molecular diagnostic for anti-malarial intervention deployment.
Njoroge H , Van't Hof A , Oruni A , Pipini D , Nagi SC , Lynd A , Lucas ER , Tomlinson S , Grau-Bove X , McDermott D , Wat'senga FT , Manzambi EZ , Agossa FR , Mokuba A , Irish S , Kabula B , Mbogo C , Bargul J , Paine MJI , Weetman D , Donnelly MJ . Mol Ecol 2022 31 (16) 4307-4318 ![]() ![]() Studies of insecticide resistance provide insights into the capacity of populations to show rapid evolutionary responses to contemporary selection. Malaria control remains heavily dependent on pyrethroid insecticides, primarily in long lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs). Resistance in the major malaria vectors has increased in concert with the expansion of LLIN distributions. Identifying genetic mechanisms underlying high-level resistance is crucial for the development and deployment of resistance-breaking tools. Using the Anopheles gambiae 1000 genomes (Ag1000g) data we identified a very recent selective sweep in mosquitoes from Uganda which localized to a cluster of cytochrome P450 genes. Further interrogation revealed a haplotype involving a trio of mutations, a nonsynonymous point mutation in Cyp6p4 (I236M), an upstream insertion of a partial Zanzibar-like transposable element (TE) and a duplication of the Cyp6aa1 gene. The mutations appear to have originated recently in An. gambiae from the Kenya-Uganda border, with stepwise replacement of the double-mutant (Zanzibar-like TE and Cyp6p4-236M) with the triple-mutant haplotype (including Cyp6aa1 duplication), which has spread into the Democratic Republic of Congo and Tanzania. The triple-mutant haplotype is strongly associated with increased expression of genes able to metabolise pyrethroids and is strongly predictive of resistance to pyrethroids most notably deltamethrin. Importantly, there was increased mortality in mosquitoes carrying the triple-mutation when exposed to nets co-treated with the synergist piperonyl butoxide (PBO). Frequencies of the triple-mutant haplotype remain spatially variable within countries, suggesting an effective marker system to guide deployment decisions for limited supplies of PBO-pyrethroid co-treated LLINs across African countries. |
The Science of Scale for Violence Prevention: A New Agenda for Family Strengthening in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
Shenderovich Y , Lachman JM , Ward CL , Wessels I , Gardner F , Tomlinson M , Oliver D , Janowski R , Martin M , Okop K , Sacolo-Gwebu H , Ngcobo LL , Fang Z , Alampay L , Baban A , Baumann AA , de Barros RB , Bojo S , Butchart A , Dippenaar W , Exavery A , Fang X , Ferdinandi I , Foran HM , Heinrichs N , Hutchings J , Kisyombe D , Massetti G , Mazak J , Mbuyi H , Singh P , Polsky K , Rakotomalala S , Raleva M , Savo R , Cluver L . Front Public Health 2021 9 581440 Ending all violence against children by 2030 is a core part of Sustainable Development Goals 5 and 16. A number of promising violence reduction strategies have been identified in research studies. However, we lack an understanding of the implementation and impact of these programs in respect to their delivery at a large scale or within existing service systems, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). We advocate for greater collaboration between researchers, policymakers, donors, governments, non-governmental organizations, and program managers and staff to study how violence prevention programs operate on a large scale. We describe a new initiative aiming to foster such collaborations in the field of family strengthening programs. |
Parenting in a time of COVID-19.
Cluver L , Lachman JM , Sherr L , Wessels I , Krug E , Rakotomalala S , Blight S , Hillis S , Bachman G , Green O , Butchart A , Tomlinson M , Ward CL , Doubt J , McDonald K . Lancet 2020 395 (10231) e64 Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is changing family life. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization estimates 1·38 billion children are out of school or child care, without access to group activities, team sports, or playgrounds. Parents and caregivers are attempting to work remotely or unable to work, while caring for children, with no clarity on how long the situation will last. For many people, just keeping children busy and safe at home is a daunting prospect. For those living in low-income and crowded households, these challenges are exacerbated. |
Leveraging differentiated HIV service delivery to expand tuberculosis preventive treatment: a call to action
Rabkin M , Howard AA , Ehrenkranz P , Fernandez LG , Preko P , Singh V , Tomlinson HL , El-Sadr WM . Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 2020 24 (2) 165-169 Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death among people living with human immunodeficiency virus (PLHIV), and sub-Saharan Africa has a particularly heavy burden of HIV-associated TB. Although effective TB preventive treatment (TPT) has been available for decades and shorter regimens are newly available in some settings, TPT coverage among PLHIV is suboptimal, leading to preventable illness and death. In 2018, the United Nations High-Level Meeting on Ending Tuberculosis called for ambitious new targets for TPT coverage among PLHIV and many countries in sub-Saharan Africa have redoubled their efforts to take TPT to scale. Importantly, however, this push to expand TPT among PLHIV is taking place in the context of a changing HIV treatment delivery landscape. Countries in sub-Saharan Africa are at the forefront of innovative changes in HIV program design, including a shift towards less-intensive differentiated service delivery (DSD) models for stable patients doing well on antiretroviral therapy. Understanding the opportunities and challenges that DSD presents for TB diagnosis, prevention and linkage to care among PLHIV will be critical to success. |
Health care autonomy of women living with HIV
Redfield RR , Modi S , Moore CA , Delaney A , Honein MA , Tomlinson HL . N Engl J Med 2019 381 (9) 798-800 In sub-Saharan Africa, more than 60% of all adults living with HIV in 2018 were women, according to the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS (https://aidsinfo.unaids.org). |
Selecting evidence-based HIV prevention behavioral interventions for HIV-negative persons for national dissemination
Collins CB Jr , Baack BN , Tomlinson H , Lyles C , Cleveland JC , Purcell DW , Ortiz-Ricard A , Mermin J . AIDS Behav 2019 23 (9) 2226-2237 This paper describes the development of a formula to determine which evidence-based behavioral interventions (EBIs) targeting HIV-negative persons would be cost-saving in comparison to the lifetime cost of HIV treatment and the process by which this formula was used to prioritize those with greatest potential impact for continued dissemination. We developed a prevention benefit index (PBI) to rank risk-reduction EBIs for HIV-negative persons based on their estimated cost for achieving the behavior change per one would-be incident infection of HIV. Inputs for calculating the PBI included the mean estimated cost-per-client served, EBI effect size for the behavior change, and the HIV incidence per 100,000 persons in the target population. EBIs for which the PBI was </= $402,000, the estimated lifetime cost of HIV care, were considered cost-saving. We were able to calculate a PBI for 35 EBI and target population combinations. Ten EBIs were cost-saving having a PBI below $402,000. One EBI did not move forward for dissemination due to high start-up dissemination costs. DHAP now supports the dissemination of 9 unique EBIs targeting 13 populations of HIV-negative persons. The application of a process, such as the PBI, may assist other health-field policymakers when making decisions about how to select and fund implementation of EBIs. |
Delay in the Provision of Antiretroviral Therapy to HIV-infected TB Patients in Nigeria
Odume B , Pathmanathan I , Pals S , Dokubo K , Onotu D , Obinna O , Anand D , Okuma J , Okpokoro E , Dutt S , Ekong E , Chukwurah N , Dakum P , Tomlinson H . Univers J Public Health 2017 5 (5) 248-255 BACKGROUND: Nigeria has a high burden of HIV and tuberculosis (TB). To reduce TB-associated morbidity and mortality, the World Health Organization recommends that HIV-positive TB patients receive antiretroviral therapy (ART) within eight weeks of TB treatment initiation, or within two weeks if profoundly immunosuppressed (CD4<50 cell/μL). METHODS: TB and HIV clinical records from facilities in two Nigerian states between October 1(st), 2012 and September 30(th), 2013 were retrospectively reviewed to assess uptake and timing of ART initiation among HIV-positive TB patients. Healthcare workers were qualitatively interviewed to assess TB/HIV knowledge and barriers to timely ART. RESULTS: Data were abstracted from 4,810 TB patient records, of which 1,249 (26.0%) had HIV-positive or unknown HIV status documented, and the 574 (45.9%) HIV-positive TB patients were evaluated for timing of ART uptake relative to TB treatment. Among 484 (84.3%) HIV-positive TB patients not already on ART, 256 (52.9%, 95% CI: 45.0-60.8) were not initiated on ART during six months of TB treatment. 30.0% of 273 patients with a known CD4≥50cells/μL started ART within eight weeks, and 14.8% of 54 patients with a known CD4<50cells/μL started within the recommended two weeks. Only 42% of health workers interviewed reported knowing to interpret guidelines on when to initiate ART in HIV-positive TB patients based on CD4 cell count results. CD4 cell count significantly predicted timely ART uptake. CONCLUSION: A large proportion of HIV-positive TB patients were not initiated on ART early or even at all during TB treatment. Retraining of staff, and interventions to strengthen referral systems should be implemented to ensure timely provision of ART among HIV-positive TB patients in Nigeria. |
Trends in prevalence of advanced HIV disease at antiretroviral therapy enrollment - 10 countries, 2004-2015
Auld AF , Shiraishi RW , Oboho I , Ross C , Bateganya M , Pelletier V , Dee J , Francois K , Duval N , Antoine M , Delcher C , Desforges G , Griswold M , Domercant JW , Joseph N , Deyde V , Desir Y , Van Onacker JD , Robin E , Chun H , Zulu I , Pathmanathan I , Dokubo EK , Lloyd S , Pati R , Kaplan J , Raizes E , Spira T , Mitruka K , Couto A , Gudo ES , Mbofana F , Briggs M , Alfredo C , Xavier C , Vergara A , Hamunime N , Agolory S , Mutandi G , Shoopala NN , Sawadogo S , Baughman AL , Bashorun A , Dalhatu I , Swaminathan M , Onotu D , Odafe S , Abiri OO , Debem HH , Tomlinson H , Okello V , Preko P , Ao T , Ryan C , Bicego G , Ehrenkranz P , Kamiru H , Nuwagaba-Biribonwoha H , Kwesigabo G , Ramadhani AA , Ng'wangu K , Swai P , Mfaume M , Gongo R , Carpenter D , Mastro TD , Hamilton C , Denison J , Wabwire-Mangen F , Koole O , Torpey K , Williams SG , Colebunders R , Kalamya JN , Namale A , Adler MR , Mugisa B , Gupta S , Tsui S , van Praag E , Nguyen DB , Lyss S , Le Y , Abdul-Quader AS , Do NT , Mulenga M , Hachizovu S , Mugurungi O , Barr BAT , Gonese E , Mutasa-Apollo T , Balachandra S , Behel S , Bingham T , Mackellar D , Lowrance D , Ellerbrock TV . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2017 66 (21) 558-563 Monitoring prevalence of advanced human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease (i.e., CD4+ T-cell count <200 cells/muL) among persons starting antiretroviral therapy (ART) is important to understand ART program outcomes, inform HIV prevention strategy, and forecast need for adjunctive therapies.*,dagger, section sign To assess trends in prevalence of advanced disease at ART initiation in 10 high-burden countries during 2004-2015, records of 694,138 ART enrollees aged ≥15 years from 797 ART facilities were analyzed. Availability of national electronic medical record systems allowed up-to-date evaluation of trends in Haiti (2004-2015), Mozambique (2004-2014), and Namibia (2004-2012), where prevalence of advanced disease at ART initiation declined from 75% to 34% (p<0.001), 73% to 37% (p<0.001), and 80% to 41% (p<0.001), respectively. Significant declines in prevalence of advanced disease during 2004-2011 were observed in Nigeria, Swaziland, Uganda, Vietnam, and Zimbabwe. The encouraging declines in prevalence of advanced disease at ART enrollment are likely due to scale-up of testing and treatment services and ART-eligibility guidelines encouraging earlier ART initiation. However, in 2015, approximately a third of new ART patients still initiated ART with advanced HIV disease. To reduce prevalence of advanced disease at ART initiation, adoption of World Health Organization (WHO)-recommended "treat-all" guidelines and strategies to facilitate earlier HIV testing and treatment are needed to reduce HIV-related mortality and HIV incidence. |
Evidence-based HIV/STD prevention intervention for black men who have sex with men
Herbst JH , Painter TM , Tomlinson HL , Alvarez ME . MMWR Suppl 2014 63 (1) 21-7 This report summarizes published findings of a community-based organization in New York City that evaluated and demonstrated the efficacy of the Many Men, Many Voices (3MV) human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/sexually transmitted disease (STD) prevention intervention in reducing sexual risk behaviors and increasing protective behaviors among black men who have sex with men (MSM). The intervention addressed social determinants of health (e.g., stigma, discrimination, and homophobia) that can influence the health and well-being of black MSM at high risk for HIV infection. This report also highlights efforts by CDC to disseminate this evidence-based behavioral intervention throughout the United States. CDC's Office of Minority Health and Health Equity selected the intervention analysis and discussion to provide an example of a program that might be effective for reducing HIV infection- and STD-related disparities in the United States. 3MV uses small group education and interaction to increase knowledge and change attitudes and behaviors related to HIV/STD risk among black MSM. Since its dissemination by CDC in 2004, 3MV has been used in many settings, including health department- and community-based organization programs. The 3MV intervention is an important component of a comprehensive HIV and STD prevention portfolio for at-risk black MSM. As CDC continues to support HIV prevention programming consistent with the National HIV/AIDS Strategy and its high-impact HIV prevention approach, 3MV will remain an important tool for addressing the needs of black MSM at high risk for HIV infection and other STDs. |
Predicting the effect of climate change on African trypanosomiasis: integrating epidemiology with parasite and vector biology
Moore S , Shrestha S , Tomlinson KW , Vuong H . J R Soc Interface 2012 9 (70) 817-30 Climate warming over the next century is expected to have a large impact on the interactions between pathogens and their animal and human hosts. Vector-borne diseases are particularly sensitive to warming because temperature changes can alter vector development rates, shift their geographical distribution and alter transmission dynamics. For this reason, African trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness), a vector-borne disease of humans and animals, was recently identified as one of the 12 infectious diseases likely to spread owing to climate change. We combine a variety of direct effects of temperature on vector ecology, vector biology and vector-parasite interactions via a disease transmission model and extrapolate the potential compounding effects of projected warming on the epidemiology of African trypanosomiasis. The model predicts that epidemics can occur when mean temperatures are between 20.7 degrees C and 26.1 degrees C. Our model does not predict a large-range expansion, but rather a large shift of up to 60 per cent in the geographical extent of the range. The model also predicts that 46-77 million additional people may be at risk of exposure by 2090. Future research could expand our analysis to include other environmental factors that influence tsetse populations and disease transmission such as humidity, as well as changes to human, livestock and wildlife distributions. The modelling approach presented here provides a framework for using the climate-sensitive aspects of vector and pathogen biology to predict changes in disease prevalence and risk owing to climate change. |
Moving toward elimination of healthcare-associated infections: a call to action
Cardo D , Dennehy PH , Halverson P , Fishman N , Kohn M , Murphy CL , Whitley RJ , Brennan PJ , Bright J , Curry C , Graham D , Haerum B , Kainer M , Kaye K , Lundstrom T , Richards C , Tomlinson L , Skillen EL , Streed S , Young M , Septimus E . Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2010 31 (11) 1101-5 Jointly, the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC), the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA), the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA), the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO), the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE), Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society (PIDS), and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) propose a call to action to move toward the elimination of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) by adapting the concept and plans used for the elimination of other diseases, including infections. Elimination, as defined for other infectious diseases, is the maximal reduction of “the incidence of infection caused by a specific agent in a defined geographical area as a result of deliberate efforts; continued measures to prevent reestablishment of transmission are required.” (p24) This definition has been useful for elimination efforts directed toward polio, tuberculosis, and syphilis and can be readily adapted to HAIs. Sustained elimination of HAIs can be based on this public health model of constant action and vigilance. Elimination will require the implementation of evidence-based practices, the alignment of financial incentives, the closing of knowledge gaps, and the acquisition of information to assess progress and to enable response to emerging threats. These efforts must be under-pinned by substantial research investments, the development of novel prevention tools, improved organizational and personal accountabilities, strong collaboration among a broad coalition of public and private stakeholders, and a clear national will to succeed in this arena. |
The associations of voluntary counseling and testing acceptance and the perceived likelihood of being HIV-infected among men with multiple sex partners in a South African township
Johnston L , O'Bra H , Chopra M , Mathews C , Townsend L , Sabin K , Tomlinson M , Kendall C . AIDS Behav 2010 14 (4) 922-31 This paper examines the socio-demographic factors and sexual risk behaviors (condom use, number of sexual partners, STI symptoms) associated with voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) acceptance and self-perceived risk of being HIV-infected among black men with multiple and younger sex partners in a South African township outside of Cape Town. Using respondent driven sampling, we interviewed 421 men, of whom 409 (97.3%) consented to provide a dried blood spot, 12.3% were HIVinfected (95% confidence intervals [CI.] 8.3, 16.9) and 47.2% (CI. 41.1, 53.6) accepted on site VCT. Twenty six percent (CI. 20.2, 30.7) reported having an HIV test in the past year. Few men perceived themselves as very likely to be infected with HIV (15.6%; CI. 10.4, 20.5). VCT acceptance was significantly associated with being older, married or living with a partner, having higher education, having four to six partners in the past three months and testing HIV positive. Self-perceived likelihood of being HIV infected was significantly associated with low condom use and having seven or more partners in the past three months, and testing HIV positive. These findings indicate that men correctly understand that engaging in certain HIV risk behaviors increases the likelihood of HIV-infection. However, those who perceive themselves at high risk of having HIV do not seek testing. Further investigation into the psychological and cultural barriers to reducing risky sexual behaviors and accessing VCT and other HIV services is recommended. |
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