The Pan African Medical Journal (Sep 2009)

Provider Initiated Testing and Counseling (PITC) for HIV in resource-limited clinical settings: important questions unanswered

  • Peter Twyman,
  • Landry Tsague,
  • Joseph Becker,
  • Ruben Sahabo

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 4

Abstract

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Testing is the gateway to HIV care and support services, and efforts to broaden treatment must include a proactive and inclusive approach to testing. Provider Initiated Testing and Counseling (PITC) for HIV utilizes the opportunity afforded by the clinical encounter for the care provider to make a clinical recommendation that the patient have a voluntary HIV test. It is hoped that by broadening testing by such strategies as PITC more patients may be identified and linked to treatment and support. However, there exist multiple challenges and questions regarding the provision of routine HIV testing and counseling in clinical facilities. In order to support further PITC efforts and scale up of current testing programs, a research agenda that addresses the ethical, social and operational components of PITC programming in health facilities, is critically needed to further guide its expansion.

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