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CDC’s Expanded HIV Testing Program:
Successes, Best Practices and Lessons
              Learned

                        Kristina Cesa, MPH
     ORISE fellow, Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention
                 Office of the Director



            National HIV Prevention Conference
                        Atlanta, GA
                   August 14-17th, 2011




      National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention
      Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention
                                                                              1
Advancing HIV Prevention: New Strategies for
         a Changing Epidemic, 2003
         Strategy 1
           • Make HIV testing a routine part of medical care
         Strategy 2
           • Implement new models for diagnosing HIV infections outside
             medical settings
         Strategy 3
           • Prevent new infections by working with persons diagnosed with HIV
             and their partners
         Strategy 4
           • Further decrease perinatal HIV transmission




MMWR 2003;52:329-32


                                                                                 2
Revised Recommendations for HIV Testing of
  Adults, Adolescents, and Pregnant Women in
              Health-Care Settings
         HIV screening in all health-care settings for adults ages 13-64
         years
           • Opt-out testing strategy
         Persons at high risk for HIV infection should be screened
         annually
         General consent for medical care should encompass consent for
         HIV testing
         Prevention counseling should not be required with HIV
         diagnostic testing or as part of HIV screening programs in
         health-care settings
         HIV screening should be included in the routine panel of prenatal
         screening tests for all pregnant women
MMWR 2006;55 (No.RR-14)


                                                                             3
PS07-768: Expanded and Integrated Human
Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Testing for Populations
 Disproportionately Affected by HIV, Primarily African
                     Americans


  Purpose:
  1. Increase testing opportunities for populations disproportionately
     affected by HIV, primarily African Americans
  2. Increase the proportion of HIV-infected persons in these
     populations who are aware of their infection and are linked to
     medical care




                                                                         4
PS07-768: Expanded HIV Testing Program

Annual Goals:
1. Test 1.5 million persons
2. Identify 20,000 previously undiagnosed HIV infections

Project length: 3 years (Oct 2007 – Sept 2010)

Total Funding: $111,211,614

Venues: Clinical settings (at least 80%)
        Non-clinical settings (no more than 20%)




                                                           5
PS07-768: Funded Jurisdictions¹

Eligibility: At least 140 AIDS cases (estimated) among African Americans in 2005

                                                                                                      VT             NYC

                                                                                       Chicago             ME
                    WA                                                                                               NH
                                     MT          ND            MN                                                         MA
                OR                                                                                    NY             RI
                                                     SD               WI
                           ID                                                    MI                             NJ
                                      WY                                                                        CT
                                                                                             PA                           Philadelphia.
                                                                IA                                              DE
                                                     NE                               OH                              MD
                      NV                                                  IL    IN
                                UT                                                         WV VA                Washington, D.C.
                                          CO              KS
 Los Angeles                                                         MO           KY
 County        CA                                                                             NC
                                                                                 TN
                                                           OK                               SC
                                      NM                             AR                                         Funded in Years 1-3
                            AZ                                             MS   AL     GA                       Funded in Years 2-3
                                                      TX             LA

                                                                                                 FL
                                           Houston

      1Represents   95% of AIDS cases among African Americans in the United States in 2005


                                                                                                                                      6
Number of HIV Tests, Positive Tests, and
               Positive Test Rates
         October 2007 – September 2010
                              Total      Clinical Settings   Non-Clinical
                                                              Settings

Tests Done                   2,786,739   2,519,917 (90%)     266,822 (10%)


Confirmed HIV+                 29,503       23,546 (80%)       5,957 (20%)

   New HIV+                    18,432        15,478 (84%)      2,954 (16%)

   Previous HIV+                11,071       8,068 (73%)       3,003 (27%)

New HIV+ Rate                    0.7           0.6               1.1


 Data Source: APR Year 1–3

                                                                             7
Number of HIV Tests, New Positive Tests and
    New Positive Rate in Years 1 – 3


                            Year 1     Year 2      Year 3

HIV Tests                   458,014   1,021,181   1,307,544

New Positive Tests            4,029      6,821     7,582

New Positive Rate             0.9%        0.7%      0.6%


Data Source: APR Year 1–3




                                                              8
Proportion of HIV Tests and New HIV Positives
              by Race/Ethnicity
       October 2007 – September 2010

              80%                                                                       HIV Tests
                               70%                                                      New HIV Positives
                        60%                                                             New Positive Rate, %
              60%
    Percent




              40%


                                                  18%                      16%
              20%                                        14%                      12%
                                                                                                     5%     5%
                             0.8                      0.5                       0.5
              0%
                         Black/AA                    White                  Hispanic              Other/Unknown*

                                                    Race/Ethnicity


 * Includes American Indian/ Alaskan Native, Asian, Native Hawaiian/ Pacific Islanders, multiple race and unknown


                                                                                                                    9
Proportion of HIV Tests and New HIV Positives
                  by Gender
       October 2007 – September 2010
              80%
                                   72%


              60%                                                    HIV Tests
                        55%
                                                                     New HIV Positives
                                                                     New Positive Rate, %
                                                  45%
    Percent




              40%

                                                               27%

              20%


                             0.9                         0.4         <1%      1%
              0%
                            Male                    Female              Other*
                                                Gender

* Includes transgender and unknown categories


                                                                                            10
Venues Funded Under PS07-768
        Year 3 (October 2009 – September 2010)*

  30%

                                                                                                       315
                             281                                         270
  20%


                                           183

  10%          108                                                                       98
                                                            76



   0%
         Emergency STD Clinics Correctional            Substance     Community Community             Other**
         Departments             Health                  Abuse         Health    Based
                                Facilities             Treatment      Centers Organizations
                                                        Centers



 * (n=1,331)
** Includes Inpatient Medical Units, Urgent Care Clinics, Substance Abuse Treatment Centers, TB Clinics, and
miscellaneous

                                                                                                               11
Distribution of HIV Tests and New Positive Tests
                  by Venue Type
        October 2007 – September 2010*
40%
                                                                                     HIV Tests
                  32%                                                                HIV Positives
            30%                                                                      New Positive Rate, %
30%


                               20% 20%
20%                                                17%
                                                                       15% 14%
                                                         12%                                    11%         11% 11%
10%
                                                                                           6%
              0.7                  0.6                 0.5                0.6                  1.2             0.6
 0%
          Emergency           STD Clinics        Community           Correctional Community Based           Other **
          Departments                           Health Centers      Health Facilities Organizations


* (n=2,562,124)
** Includes Inpatient Medical Units, Urgent Care Clinics, Substance Abuse Treatment Centers,
TB Clinics, and miscellaneous


                                                                                                                       12
New HIV-Positives by Selected Outcome
          October 2007 – September 2010

                            Total    Clinical   Non-Clinical
                                     Settings    Settings
New HIV-Positives           18,432   15,478          2,954

New HIV+ Receiving           91%      93%            84%
Test Results

New HIV+ Linked to           75%      78%            63%
Medical Care
New HIV+ Referred            83%      83%            82%
to Partner Services

Data Source: APR Year 1–3



                                                               13
CDC Cost per Test and New HIV Diagnosis
        October 2007 – September 2010

                                          Year 1                   Year 2       Year 3

Tests                                       458,014                1,021,181   1,307,544

Cost/Test                                          $58                  $36         $30

New Positives                                   4,029                  6,821       7,582

Cost/New                                       $6,634                 $5,346      $5,163
Positive


Data Source: APR and grantee financial status reports year 1 – 3




                                                                                           14
PS07-768: Barriers & Challenges


Start-up delays
New partnerships
Provider resistance
Laws and policies
Operational issues
Technical assistance/training
Data management
Reimbursement




                                        15
PS07-768: Lessons Learned

Testing Strategy: Opt-out vs. Opt-in

  Difficult to identify a profile to capture all those at risk/unaware of
  infection
  Opt-out screening reaches clients who otherwise would not have been
  tested
  Opt-out HIV screening in high prevalence areas maximizes case finding
  value




                                                                            16
PS07-768: Lessons Learned
Test Technology: Rapid vs. Conventional

  Rapid Testing Models:
   • Increase receipt of preliminary results
   • Decrease the number of clients lost to follow up
   • More feasible in settings with dedicated testing staff


  Conventional Testing:
   • Reduces disruptions to clinic flow associated with point-of-care
     testing
   • Feasible in clinical settings where routine blood tests are ordered as
     a standard of care
   • Reduces the overall costs of testing
   • Using multi-platform analyzers increases the volume of tests and
     decreases the turn around time for results

                                                                              17
PS07-768: Lessons Learned
Staffing Model: Integrated vs. Parallel

  Parallel Models:
    • Minimum effect on the clinic flow
    • Better acceptance from staff
    • More expensive and require additional space

  Integrated Models:
    • More difficult to initiate due to:
        o Perceived burden on clinic flow

        o Extensive training requirements

    • Requires getting buy-in from staff
    • More cost effective and increase sustainability




                                                        18
PS07-768: Lessons Learned

Sustainability
  Identifying and maximizing all possible sources of funding
  Building community support and cultivating program champions
  Implementing innovative strategies
    • Cost effective staffing models
    • Low cost testing models
  Develop a “business case” for routine testing




                                                                 19
PS 07-768: Lessons Learned

Bottom Line:



Routine HIV screening in healthcare settings
                  WORKS!




                                               20
PS10-10138/ PS12-1201: Expanded HIV Testing
 for Disproportionately Affected Populations

  Purpose:
    To sustain progress made under announcement PS07-768
    To expand routine testing services to new clinical venues to
    reach a broader array of at-risk populations.
  Target Population:
    African American and Hispanic men and women
    MSM and IDUs, regardless of race or ethnicity
  Grantees:
    Expanded to 30 state, territorial and local health departments
    under PS10-10138
    Eligibility further extended to 36 jurisdictions under PS12-1201


                                                                       21
PS10-10138/ PS12-1201: Expanded HIV Testing
 for Disproportionately Affected Populations

  Objectives: (when fully implemented)
   1. Conduct ≥ 1.3 million tests
   2. Identify ≥ 6,500 undiagnosed HIV infections
   3. Receipt of test results (≥ 85% of positives)
   4. Linkage to medical care (≥ 80% of positives)
   5. Linkage to partner services (≥ 80% of positives)
   6. Receipt of prevention counseling and/or referral to prevention
      services (≥ 80% of positives)
   7. Sustainability
   8. Service Integration




                                                                       22
Acknowledgments:

Co-authors:              Additional Acknowledgments:
  Christopher Brown            Nadia Duffy
  Sam Dooley                  Abigail Viall
  Erica Dunbar             PS 07-768 Grantees
  Benny Ferro
  Priya Jakhmola
  Marlene McNeese-Ward
  Kimberly Thomas
  Cathy Yanda



                                                       23
Kristina Cesa
                                        404-639-6418
                                       Kcesa@cdc.gov




For more information please contact Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

1600 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30333
Telephone, 1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636)/TTY: 1-888-232-6348
E-mail: cdcinfo@cdc.gov Web: www.cdc.gov

The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official
position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.




                  National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD & TB Prevention

                                                                                                                     24

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CDC’s Expanded HIV Testing Program: Successes, Best Practices and Lessons Learned

  • 1. CDC’s Expanded HIV Testing Program: Successes, Best Practices and Lessons Learned Kristina Cesa, MPH ORISE fellow, Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention Office of the Director National HIV Prevention Conference Atlanta, GA August 14-17th, 2011 National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention 1
  • 2. Advancing HIV Prevention: New Strategies for a Changing Epidemic, 2003 Strategy 1 • Make HIV testing a routine part of medical care Strategy 2 • Implement new models for diagnosing HIV infections outside medical settings Strategy 3 • Prevent new infections by working with persons diagnosed with HIV and their partners Strategy 4 • Further decrease perinatal HIV transmission MMWR 2003;52:329-32 2
  • 3. Revised Recommendations for HIV Testing of Adults, Adolescents, and Pregnant Women in Health-Care Settings HIV screening in all health-care settings for adults ages 13-64 years • Opt-out testing strategy Persons at high risk for HIV infection should be screened annually General consent for medical care should encompass consent for HIV testing Prevention counseling should not be required with HIV diagnostic testing or as part of HIV screening programs in health-care settings HIV screening should be included in the routine panel of prenatal screening tests for all pregnant women MMWR 2006;55 (No.RR-14) 3
  • 4. PS07-768: Expanded and Integrated Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Testing for Populations Disproportionately Affected by HIV, Primarily African Americans Purpose: 1. Increase testing opportunities for populations disproportionately affected by HIV, primarily African Americans 2. Increase the proportion of HIV-infected persons in these populations who are aware of their infection and are linked to medical care 4
  • 5. PS07-768: Expanded HIV Testing Program Annual Goals: 1. Test 1.5 million persons 2. Identify 20,000 previously undiagnosed HIV infections Project length: 3 years (Oct 2007 – Sept 2010) Total Funding: $111,211,614 Venues: Clinical settings (at least 80%) Non-clinical settings (no more than 20%) 5
  • 6. PS07-768: Funded Jurisdictions¹ Eligibility: At least 140 AIDS cases (estimated) among African Americans in 2005 VT NYC Chicago ME WA NH MT ND MN MA OR NY RI SD WI ID MI NJ WY CT PA Philadelphia. IA DE NE OH MD NV IL IN UT WV VA Washington, D.C. CO KS Los Angeles MO KY County CA NC TN OK SC NM AR Funded in Years 1-3 AZ MS AL GA Funded in Years 2-3 TX LA FL Houston 1Represents 95% of AIDS cases among African Americans in the United States in 2005 6
  • 7. Number of HIV Tests, Positive Tests, and Positive Test Rates October 2007 – September 2010 Total Clinical Settings Non-Clinical Settings Tests Done 2,786,739 2,519,917 (90%) 266,822 (10%) Confirmed HIV+ 29,503 23,546 (80%) 5,957 (20%) New HIV+ 18,432 15,478 (84%) 2,954 (16%) Previous HIV+ 11,071 8,068 (73%) 3,003 (27%) New HIV+ Rate 0.7 0.6 1.1 Data Source: APR Year 1–3 7
  • 8. Number of HIV Tests, New Positive Tests and New Positive Rate in Years 1 – 3 Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 HIV Tests 458,014 1,021,181 1,307,544 New Positive Tests 4,029 6,821 7,582 New Positive Rate 0.9% 0.7% 0.6% Data Source: APR Year 1–3 8
  • 9. Proportion of HIV Tests and New HIV Positives by Race/Ethnicity October 2007 – September 2010 80% HIV Tests 70% New HIV Positives 60% New Positive Rate, % 60% Percent 40% 18% 16% 20% 14% 12% 5% 5% 0.8 0.5 0.5 0% Black/AA White Hispanic Other/Unknown* Race/Ethnicity * Includes American Indian/ Alaskan Native, Asian, Native Hawaiian/ Pacific Islanders, multiple race and unknown 9
  • 10. Proportion of HIV Tests and New HIV Positives by Gender October 2007 – September 2010 80% 72% 60% HIV Tests 55% New HIV Positives New Positive Rate, % 45% Percent 40% 27% 20% 0.9 0.4 <1% 1% 0% Male Female Other* Gender * Includes transgender and unknown categories 10
  • 11. Venues Funded Under PS07-768 Year 3 (October 2009 – September 2010)* 30% 315 281 270 20% 183 10% 108 98 76 0% Emergency STD Clinics Correctional Substance Community Community Other** Departments Health Abuse Health Based Facilities Treatment Centers Organizations Centers * (n=1,331) ** Includes Inpatient Medical Units, Urgent Care Clinics, Substance Abuse Treatment Centers, TB Clinics, and miscellaneous 11
  • 12. Distribution of HIV Tests and New Positive Tests by Venue Type October 2007 – September 2010* 40% HIV Tests 32% HIV Positives 30% New Positive Rate, % 30% 20% 20% 20% 17% 15% 14% 12% 11% 11% 11% 10% 6% 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.6 1.2 0.6 0% Emergency STD Clinics Community Correctional Community Based Other ** Departments Health Centers Health Facilities Organizations * (n=2,562,124) ** Includes Inpatient Medical Units, Urgent Care Clinics, Substance Abuse Treatment Centers, TB Clinics, and miscellaneous 12
  • 13. New HIV-Positives by Selected Outcome October 2007 – September 2010 Total Clinical Non-Clinical Settings Settings New HIV-Positives 18,432 15,478 2,954 New HIV+ Receiving 91% 93% 84% Test Results New HIV+ Linked to 75% 78% 63% Medical Care New HIV+ Referred 83% 83% 82% to Partner Services Data Source: APR Year 1–3 13
  • 14. CDC Cost per Test and New HIV Diagnosis October 2007 – September 2010 Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Tests 458,014 1,021,181 1,307,544 Cost/Test $58 $36 $30 New Positives 4,029 6,821 7,582 Cost/New $6,634 $5,346 $5,163 Positive Data Source: APR and grantee financial status reports year 1 – 3 14
  • 15. PS07-768: Barriers & Challenges Start-up delays New partnerships Provider resistance Laws and policies Operational issues Technical assistance/training Data management Reimbursement 15
  • 16. PS07-768: Lessons Learned Testing Strategy: Opt-out vs. Opt-in Difficult to identify a profile to capture all those at risk/unaware of infection Opt-out screening reaches clients who otherwise would not have been tested Opt-out HIV screening in high prevalence areas maximizes case finding value 16
  • 17. PS07-768: Lessons Learned Test Technology: Rapid vs. Conventional Rapid Testing Models: • Increase receipt of preliminary results • Decrease the number of clients lost to follow up • More feasible in settings with dedicated testing staff Conventional Testing: • Reduces disruptions to clinic flow associated with point-of-care testing • Feasible in clinical settings where routine blood tests are ordered as a standard of care • Reduces the overall costs of testing • Using multi-platform analyzers increases the volume of tests and decreases the turn around time for results 17
  • 18. PS07-768: Lessons Learned Staffing Model: Integrated vs. Parallel Parallel Models: • Minimum effect on the clinic flow • Better acceptance from staff • More expensive and require additional space Integrated Models: • More difficult to initiate due to: o Perceived burden on clinic flow o Extensive training requirements • Requires getting buy-in from staff • More cost effective and increase sustainability 18
  • 19. PS07-768: Lessons Learned Sustainability Identifying and maximizing all possible sources of funding Building community support and cultivating program champions Implementing innovative strategies • Cost effective staffing models • Low cost testing models Develop a “business case” for routine testing 19
  • 20. PS 07-768: Lessons Learned Bottom Line: Routine HIV screening in healthcare settings WORKS! 20
  • 21. PS10-10138/ PS12-1201: Expanded HIV Testing for Disproportionately Affected Populations Purpose: To sustain progress made under announcement PS07-768 To expand routine testing services to new clinical venues to reach a broader array of at-risk populations. Target Population: African American and Hispanic men and women MSM and IDUs, regardless of race or ethnicity Grantees: Expanded to 30 state, territorial and local health departments under PS10-10138 Eligibility further extended to 36 jurisdictions under PS12-1201 21
  • 22. PS10-10138/ PS12-1201: Expanded HIV Testing for Disproportionately Affected Populations Objectives: (when fully implemented) 1. Conduct ≥ 1.3 million tests 2. Identify ≥ 6,500 undiagnosed HIV infections 3. Receipt of test results (≥ 85% of positives) 4. Linkage to medical care (≥ 80% of positives) 5. Linkage to partner services (≥ 80% of positives) 6. Receipt of prevention counseling and/or referral to prevention services (≥ 80% of positives) 7. Sustainability 8. Service Integration 22
  • 23. Acknowledgments: Co-authors: Additional Acknowledgments: Christopher Brown Nadia Duffy Sam Dooley Abigail Viall Erica Dunbar PS 07-768 Grantees Benny Ferro Priya Jakhmola Marlene McNeese-Ward Kimberly Thomas Cathy Yanda 23
  • 24. Kristina Cesa 404-639-6418 Kcesa@cdc.gov For more information please contact Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1600 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30333 Telephone, 1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636)/TTY: 1-888-232-6348 E-mail: cdcinfo@cdc.gov Web: www.cdc.gov The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD & TB Prevention 24