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Pre-test counselling does not reduce sexual risk taking – findings support streamlined HIV testing procedures
Roger Pebody, 2013-10-24 16:30:00

A large randomised controlled trial of rapid HIV testing, with or without risk-reduction counselling, has shown that the counselling is unnecessary and that testing can be provided to more people without it. The study, published in the October 23 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, lends support to existing recommendations that only a brief discussion is provided before HIV testing.

Risk-reduction counselling is an interactive process of assessing risk, recognising specific behaviours that increase the risk for acquiring or transmitting HIV, and developing a plan to take steps to reduce risks. However there is controversy over how effective brief risk-reduction counselling is when it is provided in the context of HIV testing. Effectiveness may vary according to the style of counselling provided, how long it lasts, where it is provided and who receives it.

And there are concerns that providing it may act as a barrier to significantly increasing the number of people who test for HIV and do so regularly. Although the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC) has long stated that prevention counselling is not always required before HIV testing, in remains standard practice in some settings. While some healthcare providers see it as difficult to provide, it is not always done well.

Lisa Metsch of Columbia University and colleagues therefore designed a randomised control trial, comparing the outcomes of providing rapid, point-of-care HIV testing with either risk-reduction counselling, or with information alone.

In the intervention group, participants received a 30 minute counselling session, based on the previously validated RESPECT-2 model. The counselling included a discussion of the individual’s risk behaviours and negotiation of a realistic risk-reduction plan that the individual committed to. There was also a brief explanation of the HIV test and how its results should be interpreted.

In the control group, participants just received the explanation of HIV testing – this took between two and four minutes.

To measure the impact on sexual behaviour, participants returned six months later and were tested for syphilis, herpes, HIV, gonorrhoea, chlamydia and (in the case of women) trichomonas vaginalis. They also answered questions about their sexual behaviour.

It’s worth noting that the counselling intervention was not intended to be a discussion of the pros and cons of testing, leading to the individual giving informed consent. The study did not assess any outcomes in relation to this.

The trial was conducted at sexually transmitted infection clinics in nine American cities in 2010 and 2011. A total of 5,012 individual were randomised – two-thirds were under the age of 25, two-thirds were male, and one quarter were men who have sex with men.

At baseline, 42.7% had a sexually transmitted infection, including 1.0% with previously undiagnosed HIV.

Six months later, 12.3% of those who had received counselling and 11.1% of those in the control group had acquired a new infection. The difference between these figures is not statistically significant – in other words there was no real difference between the two groups.

There were also no significant differences when looking at any specific STI, or when sub-groups were analysed in terms of age, ethnicity, gender or substance use. However men who have sex with men who received the counselling intervention had more infections (18.7%) than men who have sex with men in the control group (12.5%).

Furthermore, there were no differences between the intervention and control groups in terms of the number of partners and amount of unprotected sex that they reported.

A financial analysis showed that is cost $23 to test each person in the control group, rising to $56 in those receiving counselling. This was due to higher training costs, extra staff time, quality assurance activities and other overheads.

As the counselling intervention was not effective and cost considerably more, providing it is not an efficient use of resources, according to the investigators.

“A more focused approach to providing information at the time of testing may allow clinics to use resources more efficiently to conduct universal testing, potentially detecting more HIV cases earlier and linking and engaging HIV-infected people in care,” they say.

In an editorial accompanying the study, Jason Haukoos and Mark Thrun of the University of Colorado argue that a shift away from risk-reduction counselling is integral to reducing the number of people with undiagnosed HIV.  “At a population level, to reach a tipping point at which most clinicians screen all their adult patients for HIV infection, the perception that counseling is necessary must not trump the reality that in practice, counseling is typically ineffective,” they say. 

Source:1