Type | Journal Article - Public Health Action |
Title | Did the 2014 Ebola outbreak in Liberia affect HIV testing, linkage to care and ART initiation? |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 7 |
Issue | 1 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2017 |
Page numbers | S70-S75 |
URL | http://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/iuatld/pha/2017/00000007/A00101s1/art00013?crawler=true&mimetype=application/pdf |
Abstract | Setting: Health facilities providing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing, care and treatment in Liberia. Objective: To evaluate individuals aged 15 years who were tested, diagnosed and enrolled into HIV care before (2013), during (2014) and after the Ebola outbreak (2015). Design: A cross-sectional descriptive study. Results: A median of 6930 individuals aged 15 years per county were tested for HIV before the Ebola outbreak; this number declined by 35% (2444/6930) during the outbreak. HIV positivity remained similar before (7028/207314, 3.4%) and during the outbreak (4146/121592, 3.5%). During Ebola, HIV testing declined more in highly affected counties (68035/127468, 47%) than in counties that were less affected (16444/23955, 31%, P 0.001). Compared to the pre-Ebola period, HIV testing in less-affected counties recovered more quickly during the post-outbreak period, with a 19% increase in testing, while medium and highly affected counties remained at respectively 38% and 48% below pre-outbreak levels. Enrolment for HIV care increased during and after the outbreak compared to the pre-Ebola period. Conclusion: HIV testing and diagnosis were significantly limited during the Ebola outbreak, with the most severe effects occurring in highly affected counties. However, enrolment for HIV care and treatment were resilient throughout the outbreak. Pro-active measures are needed to sustain HIV testing rates in future epidemics. |
» | Liberia - Demographic and Health Survey 2013 |