Do gifts increase consent to home-based hiv testing A difference-in-differences study in rural kwazulu-natal, south africa

McGovern, M.E., Herbst, K., Tanser, F. , Mutevedzi, T., Canning, D., Gareta, D., Pillay, D. and Barnighausen, T. (2016) Do gifts increase consent to home-based hiv testing A difference-in-differences study in rural kwazulu-natal, south africa. International Journal of Epidemiology, 45 (6). pp. 2100-2109. ISSN 0300-5771

Full content URL: https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyw122

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Item Type:Article
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Abstract

Background: Despite the importance of HIV testing for controlling the HIV epidemic, testing rates remain low. Efforts to scale up testing coverage and frequency in hard-to-reach and at-risk populations commonly focus on home-based HIV testing. This study evaluates the effect of a gift (a US$5 food voucher for families) on consent rates for home-based HIV testing.

Methods: We use data on 18 478 individuals (6 418 men and 12 060 women) who were successfully contacted to participate in the 2009 and 2010 population-based HIV surveillance carried out by the Wellcome Trust's Africa Health Research Institute in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Of 18 478 potential participants contacted in both years, 35% (6 518) consented to test in 2009, and 41% (7 533) consented to test in 2010. Our quasi-experimental difference-in-differences approach controls for unobserved confounding in estimating the causal effect of the intervention on HIV-testing consent rates.

Results: Allocation of the gift to a family in 2010 increased the probability of family members consenting to test in the same year by 25 percentage points [95% confidence interval (CI) 21–30 percentage points; P < 0.001]. The intervention effect persisted, slightly attenuated, in the year following the intervention (2011).

Conclusions: In HIV hyperendemic settings, a gift can be highly effective at increasing consent rates for home-based HIV testing. Given the importance of HIV testing for treatment uptake and individual health, as well as for HIV treatment-as-prevention strategies and for monitoring the population impact of the HIV response, gifts should be considered as a supportive intervention for HIV-testing initiatives where consent rates have been low.

Additional Information:cited By 10
Divisions:College of Social Science > Lincoln Institute of Health
ID Code:37550
Deposited On:09 Oct 2019 15:11

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