Revised Recommendations for HIV Testing of Adults,
Adolescents, and Pregnant Women in Health-Care Settings
Prepared by
Bernard M. Branson, MD1
H. Hunter Handsfield, MD2
Margaret A. Lampe, MPH1
Robert S. Janssen, MD1
Allan W. Taylor, MD1
Sheryl B. Lyss, MD1
Jill E. Clark, MPH3
1Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention (proposed)
2Division of STD Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention (proposed) and University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
3Northrup Grumman Information Technology (contractor with CDC)
The material in this report originated in the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention (proposed), Kevin A. Fenton,
MD, PhD, Director; and the Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, Timothy D. Mastro, MD, (Acting) Director.
Corresponding preparer: Bernard M. Branson, MD, Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and
TB Prevention (proposed), 1600 Clifton Road, N.E., MS D-21, Atlanta, GA 30333. Telephone: 404-639-0900; Fax: 404-639-0897; E-mail:
bbranson@cdc.gov.
Summary
These recommendations for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing are intended for all health-care providers
in the public and private sectors, including those working in hospital emergency departments, urgent care clinics,
inpatient services, substance abuse treatment clinics, public health clinics, community clinics, correctional health-care facilities,
and primary care settings. The recommendations address HIV testing in health-care settings only. They do not modify
existing guidelines concerning HIV counseling, testing, and referral for persons at high risk for HIV who seek or receive
HIV testing in nonclinical settings (e.g., community-based organizations, outreach settings, or mobile vans). The objectives
of these recommendations are to increase HIV screening of patients, including pregnant women, in health-care settings;
foster earlier detection of HIV infection; identify and counsel persons with unrecognized HIV infection and link them to
clinical and prevention services; and further reduce perinatal transmission of HIV in the United States. These
revised recommendations update previous recommendations for HIV testing in health-care settings and for screening of
pregnant women (CDC. Recommendations for HIV testing services for inpatients and outpatients in acute-care
hospital settings. MMWR 1993;42[No. RR-2]:1--10; CDC. Revised guidelines for HIV counseling, testing, and
referral. MMWR 2001;50[No. RR-19]:1--62; and CDC. Revised recommendations for HIV screening of
pregnant women. MMWR 2001;50[No. RR-19]:63--85).
Major revisions from previously published guidelines are as follows:
For patients in all health-care settings
HIV screening is recommended for patients in all health-care settings after the patient is notified that testing
will be performed unless the patient declines (opt-out screening).
Persons at high risk for HIV infection should be screened for HIV at least annually.
Separate written consent for HIV testing should not be required; general consent for medical care should
be considered sufficient to 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.
For pregnant women
HIV screening should be included in the routine panel of prenatal screening tests for all pregnant women.
HIV screening is recommended after the patient is notified that testing will be performed unless the
patient declines (opt-out screening).
Separate written consent for HIV testing should not be required; general consent for medical care should be
considered sufficient to encompass consent for HIV testing.
Repeat screening in the third trimester is recommended in certain jurisdictions with elevated rates of HIV infection
among pregnant women.
Introduction
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) remain
leading causes of illness and death in the United States. As of
December 2004, an estimated 944,306 persons had received
a diagnosis of AIDS, and of these, 529,113 (56%) had died
(1). The annual number of AIDS cases and deaths
declined substantially after 1994 but stabilized during 1999--2004
(1). However, since 1994, the annual number of cases
among blacks, members of other racial/ethnic minority populations, and persons exposed through heterosexual contact
has increased. The number of children reported with AIDS
attributed to perinatal HIV transmission peaked at 945 in
1992 and declined 95% to 48 in 2004 (1), primarily because of the identification of HIV-infected pregnant women and
the effectiveness of antiretroviral prophylaxis in reducing mother-to-child transmission of HIV
(2).
By 2002, an estimated 38%--44% of all adults in the United States had been tested for HIV; 16--22 million
persons aged 18--64 years are tested annually for HIV
(3). However, at the end of 2003, of the approximately 1.0--1.2
million persons estimated to be living with HIV in the United States, an estimated one quarter (252,000--312,000
persons) were unaware of their infection and therefore unable to benefit from clinical care to reduce morbidity and mortality
(4). A number of these persons are likely to have transmitted HIV unknowingly
(5).
Treatment has improved survival rates dramatically, especially since the introduction of highly active
antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in 1995 (6). However, progress in effecting earlier diagnosis has been insufficient. During
1990--1992, the proportion of persons who first tested positive for HIV <1 year before receiving a diagnosis of AIDS was
51% (7); during 1993--2004, this proportion declined only modestly, to 39% in 2004
(1). Persons tested late in the course of their infection were more likely to be black or Hispanic and to have been exposed through heterosexual contact;
87% received their first positive HIV test result at an acute or referral medical care setting, and 65% were tested for
HIV antibody because of illness (8).
These recommendations update previous recommendations for HIV testing in health-care settings
(9,10) and for screening of pregnant women
(11). The objectives of these recommendations are to increase HIV screening of
patients, including pregnant women, in health-care settings; foster earlier detection of HIV infection; identify and
counsel persons with unrecognized HIV infection and link them to
clinical and prevention services; and further reduce
perinatal transmission of HIV in the United States.
Single copies of this report are available free of charge from CDC's
National Prevention Information Network, telephone 800-458-5231 (Mondays--Fridays, 9:00 a.m.--8:00 p.m. ET).
Background
Definitions
Diagnostic testing. Performing an HIV test for persons
with clinical signs or symptoms consistent with HIV infection.
Screening. Performing an HIV test for all persons in a
defined population (12).
Targeted testing. Performing an HIV test for subpopulations of persons at higher risk, typically defined on the
basis of behavior, clinical, or demographic characteristics
(9).
Informed consent. A process of communication between patient and provider through which an informed patient
can choose whether to undergo HIV testing or decline to do so. Elements of informed consent typically include
providing oral or written information regarding HIV, the risks and benefits of testing, the implications of HIV test results,
how test results will be communicated, and the opportunity to ask
questions.
Opt-out screening. Performing HIV screening after
notifying the patient that 1) the test will be performed and 2)
the patient may elect to decline or defer testing. Assent is
inferred unless the patient declines testing.
HIV-prevention counseling. An interactive process of
assessing risk, recognizing specific behaviors that increase
the risk for acquiring or transmitting HIV, and developing a plan to take specific steps to reduce risks
(13).
Evolution of HIV Testing Recommendations in Health-Care Settings and for
Pregnant Women
In 1985, when HIV testing first became available, the main goal of such testing was to protect the blood
supply. Alternative test sites were established to deter persons from using blood bank testing to learn their HIV status. At
that time, professional opinion was divided regarding the value of HIV testing and whether HIV testing should
be encouraged because no consensus existed regarding whether a positive test predicted transmission to sex partners or
from mother to infant (14). No effective treatment existed, and counseling was designed in part to ensure that persons
tested were aware that the meaning of positive test results was
uncertain.
During the next 2 years, the implications of positive HIV serology became evident, and in 1987, the United
States Public Health Service (USPHS) issued guidelines making HIV counseling and testing a priority as a prevention
strategy for persons most likely to be infected or who practiced high-risk behaviors and recommended routine testing of
all persons seeking treatment for STDs, regardless of health-care setting
(15). "Routine" was defined as a policy to
provide these services to all clients after informing them that testing would be
conducted (15).
In 1993, CDC recommendations for voluntary HIV counseling and testing were extended to include
hospitalized patients and persons obtaining health care as outpatients in acute-care hospital settings, including
emergency departments (EDs) (10). Hospitals with HIV seroprevalence rates of >1% or AIDS diagnosis rates of >1 per
1,000 discharges were encouraged to adopt a policy of offering voluntary HIV counseling and testing routinely to all
patients aged 15--54 years. Health-care providers in acute-care settings were encouraged to structure counseling and
testing procedures to facilitate confidential, voluntary participation and to include basic information
regarding the medical implications of the test, the option to receive more information, and documentation of informed consent
(10). In 1994, guidelines for counseling and testing persons with high-risk behaviors specified prevention
counseling to develop specific prevention goals and strategies for each person (client-centered counseling)
(16). In 1995, after perinatal transmission
of HIV was demonstrated to be substantially reduced by administration of zidovudine to HIV-infected pregnant
women and their newborns, USPHS recommended that all pregnant women be counseled and
encouraged to undergo voluntary testing for HIV
(17,18).
In 2001, CDC modified the recommendations for pregnant women to emphasize HIV screening as a routine part
of prenatal care, simplification of the testing process so pretest counseling would not pose a barrier, and flexibility of the
consent process to allow multiple types of informed consent
(11). In addition, the 2001 recommendations for HIV testing in
health-care settings were extended to include multiple additional clinical venues in both private and public health-care
sectors, encouraging providers to make HIV counseling and testing more accessible and
acknowledging their need for flexibility
(9). CDC recommended that HIV testing be offered routinely to all
patients in high HIV-prevalence health-care settings. In
low prevalence settings, in which the majority of clients are at minimal risk, targeted HIV testing on the basis of risk screening
was considered more feasible for identifying limited numbers of HIV-infected persons
(9).
In 2003, CDC introduced the initiative Advancing HIV Prevention: New Strategies for a Changing Epidemic
(19). Two key strategies of this initiative are 1) to make HIV testing a routine part of medical care on the same voluntary
basis as other diagnostic and screening tests and 2) to reduce perinatal transmission of HIV further by universal testing of
all pregnant women and by using rapid tests during labor and delivery or postpartum if the mother was not
screened prenatally (19). In its technical guidance, CDC acknowledged that prevention counseling is desirable for all persons
at risk for HIV but recognized that such counseling might not be appropriate or feasible in all settings
(20). Because time constraints or discomfort with discussing their patients' risk behaviors caused some providers to perceive requirements
for prevention counseling and written informed consent as a barrier
(12,21--23), the initiative advocated
streamlined approaches.
In March 2004, CDC convened a meeting of health-care providers, representatives from professional associations,
and local health officials to obtain advice concerning how best to expand HIV testing, especially in high-volume,
high-prevalence acute-care settings. Consultants recommended simplifying the HIV screening process to make it more
feasible and less costly and advocated more frequent diagnostic testing of patients with symptoms. In April 2005, CDC
initiated a comprehensive review of the literature regarding HIV testing in health-care settings and, on the basis of
published evidence and lessons learned from CDC-sponsored demonstration projects of HIV screening in health-care
facilities, began to prepare recommendations to implement these strategies. In August 2005, CDC invited health-care
providers,
representatives from public health agencies and community organizations, and persons living with HIV to review
an outline of proposed recommendations. In November 2005, CDC convened a meeting of researchers, representatives
of professional health-care provider organizations, clinicians, persons living with HIV, and representatives from
community organizations and agencies overseeing care of HIV-infected persons to review CDC's proposed recommendations.
Before final revision of these recommendations, CDC described the proposals at national meetings of researchers and
health-care providers and, in March 2006, solicited peer review by health-care professionals, in compliance with
requirements of the Office of Management and Budget for influential scientific assessments, and invited comment from
multiple professional and community organizations. The final recommendations were
further refined on the basis of comments from these constituents.
Rationale for Routine Screening for HIV Infection
Previous CDC and U.S. Preventive Services Task Force guidelines for HIV testing recommended routine
counseling and testing for persons at high risk for HIV and for those in acute-care settings in which HIV prevalence was
>1% (9,10,24). These guidelines proved difficult to implement because 1) the cost of HIV screening often is not
reimbursed, 2) providers in busy health-care settings often lack the time necessary to conduct risk assessments and might
perceive counseling requirements as a barrier to testing, and 3) explicit information regarding HIV prevalence typically is
not available to guide selection of specific settings
for screening (25--29).
These revised CDC recommendations advocate routine voluntary HIV screening as a normal part of medical
practice, similar to screening for other treatable conditions. Screening is a basic public health tool used to
identify unrecognized health conditions so treatment can be offered before symptoms develop and, for communicable diseases,
so interventions can be implemented to reduce the likelihood of continued transmission
(30).
HIV infection is consistent with all generally accepted criteria that justify screening: 1) HIV infection is a
serious health disorder that can be diagnosed before symptoms develop; 2) HIV can be detected by reliable, inexpensive,
and noninvasive screening tests; 3) infected patients have years of life to gain if treatment is initiated early, before
symptoms develop; and 4) the costs of screening are reasonable in relation to the anticipated benefits
(30). Among pregnant women, screening has proven substantially more effective than risk-based testing for detecting unsuspected
maternal HIV infection and preventing perinatal transmission
(31--33).
Rationale for New Recommendations
Often, persons with HIV infection visit health-care settings (e.g., hospitals, acute-care clinics, and sexually
transmitted disease [STD] clinics) years before receiving a diagnosis but are not tested for HIV
(34--36). Since the 1980s, the demographics of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States have changed; increasing proportions of infected
persons are aged <20 years, women, members of racial or ethnic minority populations, persons who reside outside
metropolitan areas, and heterosexual men and women who frequently are unaware that they are at risk for HIV
(37). As a result, the effectiveness of using risk-based testing to identify HIV-infected persons has diminished
(34,35,38,39).
Prevention strategies that incorporate universal HIV screening have been highly effective. For example, screening
blood donors for HIV has nearly eliminated transfusion-associated HIV infection in the United States
(40). In addition, incidence of pediatric HIV/AIDS in the United States has
declined substantially since the 1990s, when
prevention strategies began to include specific recommendations for routine HIV testing of pregnant women
(18,41). Perinatal transmission rates can be reduced to <2% with universal screening of pregnant women in combination
with prophylactic administration of antiretroviral drugs
(42,43), scheduled cesarean delivery when indicated
(44,45), and avoidance of breast feeding
(46).
These successes contrast with a relative lack of progress in preventing sexual transmission of HIV, for which
screening rarely is performed. Declines in HIV incidence
observed in the early 1990s have leveled and might even have reversed
in certain populations in recent years
(47,48). Since 1998, the estimated number of new infections has remained stable
at approximately 40,000 annually (49). In 2001, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) emphasized prevention services
for HIV-infected persons and recommended policies for
diagnosing HIV infections earlier to increase the number of
HIV-infected persons who were aware of their infections and who were offered clinical and prevention services
(37). The
majority of persons who are aware of their HIV infections substantially reduce sexual behaviors that might transmit
HIV after they become aware they are infected
(5). In a meta-analysis of findings from eight studies, the prevalence
of unprotected anal or vaginal intercourse with uninfected partners was on average 68% lower for HIV-infected
persons who were aware of their status than it was for HIV-infected persons who were
unaware of their status (5). To increase diagnosis of HIV
infection, destigmatize the testing process, link clinical care with prevention, and ensure
immediate access to clinical care for persons with newly identified HIV infection, IOM and other health-care professionals
with expertise (25,37,50,51) have encouraged adoption of routine HIV testing in all health-care settings.
Routine prenatal HIV testing with streamlined counseling and consent procedures has increased the number
of pregnant women tested substantially (52). By contrast, the number of persons at risk for HIV infection who
are screened in acute-care settings remains low, despite repeated recommendations in support of routine risk-based
testing in health-care settings
(9,10,15,34,53,54). In a survey of 154 health-care providers in 10 hospital EDs,
providers reported caring for an average of 13 patients per week suspected to have STDs, but only 10% of these
providers encouraged such patients to be tested for HIV while they were in the ED
(54). Another 35% referred patients to confidential HIV testing sites in the community; however, such referrals have proven ineffective because of
poor compliance by patients (55). Reasons cited for not offering HIV testing in the ED included lack of
established mechanisms to ensure follow-up (51%), lack of the certification perceived as necessary to provide counseling (45%),
and belief that the testing process was too time-consuming (19%)
(54).
With the institution of HIV screening in certain hospitals and EDs, the percentage of patients who test positive
(2%--7%) often has exceeded that observed nationally at publicly funded HIV counseling and testing sites (1.5%) and
STD clinics (2%) serving persons at high risk for HIV
(53,56--59). Because patients rarely were seeking testing
when screening was offered at these hospitals, HIV infections often were identified earlier than they might otherwise have
been (29). Targeted testing programs also have been implemented in acute-care settings; nearly two thirds of patients in
these settings accept testing, but because risk assessment and prevention counseling are time-consuming, only a
limited proportion of eligible patients can be tested
(29). Targeted testing on the basis of risk behaviors fails to identify
a substantial number of persons who are HIV infected
(34,35,39). A substantial number of persons, including
persons with HIV infection, do not perceive themselves to be at risk for HIV or do not disclose their risks
(53,56,59). Routine HIV testing reduces the stigma associated with testing that
requires assessment of risk behaviors
(60--63). More patients accept recommended HIV testing when it is
offered routinely to everyone, without a risk assessment
(54,56).
In 1999, to increase the proportion of women tested for HIV, IOM recommended 1) adopting a national policy
of universal HIV testing of pregnant women with patient notification (opt-out screening) as a routine component
of prenatal care, 2) eliminating requirements for extensive pretest counseling while requiring provision of basic
information regarding HIV, and 3) not requiring explicit written consent to be tested for HIV
(12). Subsequent studies have indicated that these policies, as proposed by IOM and other professional organizations
(12,64,65), reflect an ethical balance among public health goals, justice, and individual rights
(66,67). Rates of HIV screening are consistently
higher at settings that provide prenatal and STD services using opt-out screening than at opt-in programs, which require
pre-test counseling and explicit written consent
(52,68--74). Pregnant women express less anxiety with opt-out
HIV screening and do not find it difficult to decline a test
(68,74). In 2006, approximately 65% of U.S. adults
surveyed concurred that HIV testing should be treated the same as screening for any other disease, without special
procedures such as written permission from the patient
(75).
Adolescents aged 13--19 years represent new cohorts of persons at risk, and prevention efforts need to be repeated
for each succeeding generation of young persons
(63). The 2005 Youth Risk Behavior Survey indicated that 47% of
high school students reported that they had had sexual intercourse at least once, and 37% of sexually active students had
not used a condom during their most recent act of sexual intercourse
(76). More than half of all HIV-infected adolescents
are estimated not to have been tested and are unaware of their infection
(77,78). Among young (aged 18--24 years)
men who have sex with men (MSM) surveyed during 2004--2005 in five U.S. cities, 14% were infected with HIV; 79%
of these HIV-infected MSM were unaware of their infection
(56). The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends
that clinicians obtain information from adolescent patients regarding their sexual activity and inform them how to
prevent HIV infection (79). Evidence indicates that adolescents prefer to receive this information from their
health-care providers rather than from their parents, teachers, or friends
(80). However, fewer than half of clinicians provide
such
guidance (81). Health-care providers' recommendations also influence adolescents' decision to be tested. Among
reasons for HIV testing provided by 528 adolescents who had primary care providers, 58% cited their
provider's recommendation as their reason for testing
(82).
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recently recommended that clinicians screen for HIV all adults and
adolescents at increased risk for HIV, on the basis that when HIV is diagnosed early, appropriately timed interventions,
particularly HAART, can lead to improved health outcomes, including slower clinical progression and reduced mortality
(24). The Task Force also recommended screening all pregnant women, regardless of risk, but made no recommendation for
or against routinely screening asymptomatic adults and adolescents with no identifiable risk factors for HIV. The Task
Force concluded that such screening would detect additional patients with HIV, but the overall number would be
limited, and the potential benefits did not clearly outweigh the burden on primary care practices or the potential harms of
a general HIV screening program (24,83). In making these recommendations, the Task Force considered how
many patients would need to be screened to prevent one clinical progression or death during the 3-year period after
screening. On the basis of evidence available for its review, the Task Force was unable to calculate benefits attributable to
the prevention of secondary HIV transmission to partners
(84). However, a recent meta-analysis indicated that
HIV-infected persons reduced high-risk behavior substantially when they became aware of their infection
(5). Because viral load is the chief biologic predictor of HIV transmission
(85), reduction in viral load through timely initiation of HAART
might reduce transmission, even for HIV-infected patients who do not change their risk behavior
(86). Estimated transmission is 3.5 times higher among persons who are unaware of their infection than among persons who are aware of
their infection and contributes disproportionately to the number of new HIV infections each year in the United States
(87). In theory, new sexual HIV infections could be reduced >30% per year if all infected persons could learn their HIV
status and adopt changes in behavior similar to those adopted by persons
already aware of their infection (87).
Recent studies demonstrate that voluntary HIV screening is cost-effective even in health-care settings in which
HIV prevalence is low (26,27,86). In populations for which
prevalence of undiagnosed HIV infection is
>0.1%, HIV screening is as cost-effective as other established screening programs for chronic diseases (e.g., hypertension,
colon cancer, and breast cancer) (27,86). Because of the substantial survival advantage resulting from earlier diagnosis of
HIV infection when therapy can be initiated before
severe immunologic compromise occurs, screening reaches
conventional benchmarks for cost-effectiveness even before including the important public health benefit from reduced
transmission to sex partners (86).
Linking patients who have received a diagnosis of HIV
infection to prevention and care is essential. HIV
screening without such linkage confers little or no benefit to the
patient. Although moving patients into care incurs
substantial costs, it also triggers sufficient survival benefits that justify the additional costs. Even if only a limited fraction of
patients who receive HIV-positive results are linked to care, the survival benefits per dollar spent on screening represent
good comparative value (26,27,88).
The benefit of providing prevention counseling in conjunction with HIV testing is less clear. HIV counseling
with testing has been demonstrated to be an effective intervention for HIV-infected participants, who increased their
safer behaviors and decreased their risk behaviors; HIV counseling and testing as implemented in the studies had little
effect on HIV-negative participants (89). However, randomized controlled trials have demonstrated that the nature
and duration of prevention counseling might influence its effectiveness
(90,91). Carefully controlled, theory-based prevention counseling in STD clinics has helped HIV-negative participants reduce their risk behaviors compared
with participants who received only a didactic prevention message from health-care providers
(90). A more intensive intervention among HIV-negative MSM at high risk, consisting of 10 theory-based individual counseling
sessions followed by maintenance sessions every 3
months, resulted in reductions in unprotected sex with partners who
were HIV infected or of unknown status, compared with MSM who received structured prevention counseling only
twice yearly (91).
Timely access to diagnostic HIV test results also improves health outcomes. Diagnostic testing in health-care
settings continues to be the mechanism by which nearly half of new HIV infections are identified. During 2000--2003,
of persons reported with HIV/AIDS who were interviewed in 16 states, 44% were tested for HIV because of illness
(8). Compared with HIV testing after patients were admitted to the hospital, expedited diagnosis by rapid HIV testing
in the ED before admission led to shorter hospital stays, increased the number of patients aware of their HIV status
before
discharge, and improved entry into outpatient care
(92). However, at least 28 states have laws or regulations that
limit health-care providers' ability to order diagnostic testing for HIV infection if the patient is unable to give consent
for HIV testing, even when the test results are likely to alter the patient's diagnostic or therapeutic management
(93).
Of the 40,000 persons who acquire HIV infection each year, an estimated 40%--90% will experience symptoms
of acute HIV infection (94--96), and a substantial number will seek medical care. However, acute HIV infection often
is not recognized by primary care clinicians because the symptoms
resemble those of influenza, infectious
mononucleosis, and other viral illnesses
(97). Acute HIV infection can be diagnosed by detecting HIV RNA in plasma from
persons with a negative or indeterminate HIV antibody test. One study based on national ambulatory medical care
surveys estimated that the prevalence of acute HIV infection was 0.5%--0.7% among ambulatory patients who sought care
for fever or rash (98). Although the long-term benefit of HAART during acute HIV infection has not been
established conclusively (99), identifying primary HIV infection can reduce the spread of HIV that might otherwise occur
during the acute phase of HIV disease
(100,101).
Perinatal HIV transmission continues to occur, primarily among women who lack prenatal care or who were
not offered voluntary HIV counseling and testing during pregnancy. A substantial proportion of the estimated
144--236 perinatal HIV infections in the United States each year can be attributed to the lack of timely HIV testing
and treatment of pregnant women (102). Multiple barriers to HIV testing have been identified, including language
barriers; late entry into prenatal care; health-care providers' perceptions that their patients are at low risk for HIV; lack of time
for counseling and testing, particularly for rapid testing during labor and delivery; and state regulations
requiring counseling and separate informed consent
(103). A survey of 653 obstetrical providers in North Carolina suggested
that not all health-care providers embrace universal testing of pregnant women; the strength with which
providers recommended prenatal testing to their patients and the numbers of women tested
depended largely on the providers' perception of the patients' risk behaviors
(21). Data confirm that testing rates are higher when HIV tests are included
in the standard panel of screening tests for all pregnant women
(52,69,104). Women also are much more likely to
be tested if they perceive that their health-care provider strongly recommends HIV testing
(105). As universal prenatal screening has become more widespread, an increasing proportion of pregnant women who had undiagnosed
HIV infection at the time of delivery were found to have seroconverted during pregnancy
(106). A second HIV test during the third trimester for women in settings with
elevated HIV incidence (>17 cases per 100,000 person-years) is
cost-effective and might result in substantial reductions in mother-to-child HIV transmission
(107).
Every perinatal HIV transmission is a sentinel health event, signaling either a missed opportunity for prevention
or, more rarely, a failure of interventions to prevent perinatal transmission. When these infections occur, they underscore
the need for improved strategies to ensure that all pregnant women undergo HIV testing and, if found to be HIV
positive, receive proper interventions to reduce their transmission risk and safeguard their health and the health of their infants.
Recommendations for Adults and Adolescents
CDC recommends that diagnostic HIV testing and opt-out HIV screening be a part of routine clinical care in
all health-care settings while also preserving the patient's option to decline HIV testing and ensuring a
provider-patient relationship conducive to optimal clinical and preventive care. The recommendations are intended for providers in
all health-care settings, including hospital EDs, urgent-care clinics, inpatient services, STD clinics or other
venues offering clinical STD services, tuberculosis (TB) clinics, substance abuse treatment clinics, other public health
clinics, community clinics, correctional health-care facilities, and primary care settings. The guidelines address HIV testing
in health-care settings only; they do not modify existing guidelines concerning HIV counseling, testing, and referral
for persons at high risk for HIV who seek or receive HIV testing in nonclinical settings (e.g.,
community-based organizations, outreach settings, or mobile vans)
(9).
Screening for HIV Infection
In all health-care settings, screening for HIV infection should be performed routinely for all patients aged
13--64 years. Health-care providers should initiate screening unless prevalence of undiagnosed HIV infection in
their patients has been documented to be <0.1%. In the
absence of existing data for HIV prevalence,
health-care
providers should initiate voluntary HIV screening until they establish that the diagnostic yield is <1 per
1,000 patients screened, at which point such screening is no longer warranted.
All patients initiating treatment for TB should be screened routinely for HIV infection
(108).
All patients seeking treatment for STDs, including all patients attending STD clinics, should be
screened routinely for HIV during each visit for a new complaint, regardless of whether the patient is known or suspected
to have specific behavior risks for HIV infection.
Repeat Screening
Health-care providers should subsequently test all persons likely to be at high risk for HIV at least annually.
Persons likely to be at high risk include injection-drug users and their sex partners, persons who exchange sex for money
or drugs, sex partners of HIV-infected persons, and MSM or heterosexual persons who themselves or whose sex
partners have had more than one sex partner since their most recent HIV test.
Health-care providers should encourage patients and their prospective sex partners to be tested before initiating
a new sexual relationship.
Repeat screening of persons not likely to be at high risk for HIV should be performed on the basis of
clinical judgment.
Unless recent HIV test results are immediately available, any person whose blood or body fluid is the source of
an occupational exposure for a health-care provider should be informed of the incident and tested for HIV infection
at the time the exposure occurs.
Consent and Pretest Information
Screening should be voluntary and undertaken only with the patient's knowledge and understanding that
HIV testing is planned.
Patients should be informed orally or in writing that HIV testing will be performed unless they decline
(opt-out screening). Oral or written information should
include an explanation of HIV infection and the meanings
of positive and negative test results, and the patient should be offered an opportunity to ask questions and to decline
testing. With such notification, consent for HIV screening should be incorporated into the patient's
general informed consent for medical care on the same basis as are other screening or diagnostic tests; a separate
consent form for HIV testing is not recommended.
Easily understood informational materials should be made available in the languages of the
commonly encountered populations within the service area. The competence of interpreters and bilingual staff
to provide language assistance to patients with limited
English proficiency must be ensured.
If a patient declines an HIV test, this decision should be documented in the medical record.
Diagnostic Testing for HIV Infection
All patients with signs or symptoms consistent with HIV infection or an opportunistic illness characteristic of
AIDS should be tested for HIV.
Clinicians should maintain a high level of suspicion for acute HIV infection in all patients who have a
compatible clinical syndrome and who report recent high-risk behavior. When acute retroviral syndrome is a possibility,
a plasma RNA test should be used in conjunction with an HIV antibody test to diagnose acute HIV infection
(96).
Patients or persons responsible for the patient's care should be notified orally that testing is planned, advised of
the indication for testing and the implications of positive and negative test results, and offered an opportunity to
ask questions and to decline testing. With such notification, the patient's general consent for medical care is
considered sufficient for diagnostic HIV testing.
Similarities and Differences Between Current and Previous Recommendations
for Adults and Adolescents
Aspects of these recommendations that remain unchanged from previous recommendations are as follows:
HIV testing must be voluntary and free from coercion. Patients must not be tested without their knowledge.
HIV testing is recommended and should be routine for persons attending STD clinics and those seeking
treatment for STDs in other clinical settings.
Access to clinical care, prevention counseling, and support services is essential for persons with positive HIV
test results.
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Aspects of these recommendations that differ from previous recommendations are as follows:
Screening after notifying the patient that an HIV test will be performed unless the patient declines
(opt-out screening) is recommended in all health-care settings. Specific signed consent for HIV testing should not
be required. General informed consent for medical care should be considered sufficient to encompass informed
consent for HIV testing.
Persons at high risk for HIV should be screened for HIV at least annually.
HIV test results should be provided in the same manner as results of other diagnostic or screening tests.
Prevention counseling should not be required as a part of HIV screening programs in health-care settings.
Prevention counseling is strongly encouraged for persons at high risk for HIV in settings in which risk behaviors
are assessed routinely (e.g., STD clinics) but should not have to be linked to HIV testing.
HIV diagnostic testing or screening to detect HIV infection earlier should be considered distinct from
HIV counseling and testing conducted primarily as a prevention intervention for uninfected persons at high risk.
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Recommendations for Pregnant Women
These guidelines reiterate the recommendation for universal HIV screening early in pregnancy but advise
simplifying the screening process to maximize opportunities for women to learn their HIV status during pregnancy, preserving
the woman's option to decline HIV testing, and ensuring a
provider-patient relationship conducive to optimal clinical
and preventive care. All women should receive HIV screening consistent with the recommendations for adults
and adolescents. HIV screening should be a routine component of preconception care, maximizing opportunities for
all women to know their HIV status before conception
(109). In addition, screening early in pregnancy enables
HIV-infected women and their infants to benefit from appropriate and timely interventions (e.g., antiretroviral
medications [43], scheduled cesarean delivery
[44], and avoidance of breastfeeding*
[46]). These recommendations are intended
for clinicians who provide care to pregnant women and newborns and for health policy makers who have responsibility
for these populations.
HIV Screening for Pregnant Women and Their Infants
Universal Opt-Out Screening
All pregnant women in the United States should be screened for HIV infection.
Screening should occur after a woman is notified that HIV screening is recommended for all pregnant patients
and that she will receive an HIV test as part of the routine panel of prenatal tests unless she declines (opt-out
screening).
HIV testing must be voluntary and free from coercion. No woman should be tested without her knowledge.
Pregnant women should receive oral or written information that includes an explanation of HIV infection,
a description of interventions that can reduce HIV transmission from mother to infant, and the meanings of
positive and negative test results and should be offered an opportunity to ask questions and to decline testing.
No additional process or written documentation of
informed consent beyond what is required for other
routine prenatal tests should be required for HIV testing.
If a patient declines an HIV test, this decision should be documented in the medical record.
Addressing Reasons for Declining Testing
Providers should discuss and address reasons for declining an HIV test (e.g., lack of perceived risk; fear of the
disease; and concerns regarding partner violence or
potential stigma or discrimination).
Women who decline an HIV test because they have had a previous negative test result should be informed of
the importance of retesting during each pregnancy.
Logistical reasons for not testing (e.g., scheduling) should be resolved.
Certain women who initially decline an HIV test might accept at a later date, especially if their concerns
are discussed. Certain women will continue to decline testing, and their decisions should be respected and
documented in the medical record.
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Timing of HIV Testing
To promote informed and timely therapeutic decisions, health-care providers should test women for HIV as early
as possible during each pregnancy. Women who decline
the test early in prenatal care should be encouraged
to be tested at a subsequent visit.
A second HIV test during the third trimester, preferably <36 weeks of gestation, is cost-effective even in areas of
low HIV prevalence and may be considered for all pregnant women. A second HIV test during the third
trimester is recommended for women who meet one or more of the following criteria:
--- Women who receive health care in jurisdictions with elevated incidence of HIV or AIDS among women aged
15--45 years. In 2004, these jurisdictions included Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of
Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, New
York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia.
--- Women who receive health care in facilities in which prenatal screening identifies at least one
HIV-infected pregnant woman per 1,000 women screened.
--- Women who are known to be at high risk for acquiring HIV (e.g., injection-drug users and their sex
partners, women who exchange sex for money or drugs, women who are sex partners of HIV-infected persons, and
women who have had a new or more than one sex partner during this pregnancy).
--- Women who have signs or symptoms consistent with acute HIV infection. When acute retroviral syndrome is
a possibility, a plasma RNA test should be used in conjunction with an HIV antibody test to diagnose acute
HIV infection (96).
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Rapid Testing During Labor
Any woman with undocumented HIV status at the time of labor should be screened with a rapid HIV test
unless she declines (opt-out screening).
Reasons for declining a rapid test should be explored (see Addressing Reasons for Declining Testing).
Immediate initiation of appropriate antiretroviral prophylaxis
(42) should be recommended to women on the basis
of a reactive rapid test result without waiting for the result of a confirmatory test.
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Postpartum/Newborn Testing
When a woman's HIV status is still unknown at the time of delivery, she should be screened
immediately postpartum with a rapid HIV test unless she declines (opt-out screening).
When the mother's HIV status is unknown postpartum, rapid testing of the newborn as soon as possible after
birth is recommended so antiretroviral prophylaxis can be
offered to HIV-exposed infants. Women should be informed
that identifying HIV antibodies in the newborn indicates that the mother is infected.
For infants whose HIV exposure status is unknown and who are in foster care, the person legally authorized
to provide consent should be informed that rapid HIV testing is recommended for infants whose biologic mothers
have not been tested.
The benefits of neonatal antiretroviral prophylaxis are best realized when it is initiated
<12 hours after birth (110).
Confirmatory Testing
Whenever possible, uncertainties regarding laboratory test results indicating HIV infection status should be
resolved before final decisions are made regarding reproductive options, antiretroviral therapy, cesarean delivery, or
other interventions.
If the confirmatory test result is not available before
delivery, immediate initiation of appropriate
antiretroviral prophylaxis (42) should be recommended to any pregnant patient whose HIV screening test
result is reactive to reduce the risk for perinatal
transmission.
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Similarities and Differences Between Current and Previous Recommendations
for Pregnant Women and Their Infants
Aspects of these recommendations that remain unchanged from previous recommendations are as follows:
Universal HIV testing with notification should be
performed for all pregnant women as early as possible
during pregnancy.
HIV screening should be repeated in the third trimester of pregnancy for women known to be at high risk for HIV.
Providers should explore and address reasons for
declining HIV testing.
Pregnant women should receive appropriate health
education, including information regarding HIV and
its transmission, as a routine part of prenatal care.
Access to clinical care, prevention counseling, and support services is essential for women with positive HIV
test results.
<>
Aspects of these recommendations that differ from previous recommendations are as follows:
HIV screening should be included in the routine panel of prenatal screening tests for all pregnant women.
Patients should be informed that HIV screening is recommended for all pregnant women and that it will be
performed unless they decline (opt-out screening).
Repeat HIV testing in the third trimester is recommended for all women in jurisdictions with elevated HIV or
AIDS incidence and for women receiving health care in facilities with at least one diagnosed HIV case per
1,000 pregnant women per year.
Rapid HIV testing should be performed for all women in labor who do not have documentation of results from
an HIV test during pregnancy. Patients should be informed that HIV testing is recommended for all pregnant
women and will be performed unless they decline (opt-out screening). Immediate initiation of appropriate
antiretroviral prophylaxis should be recommended on the basis of a reactive rapid HIV test result, without awaiting the result
of confirmatory testing.
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Additional Considerations for HIV Screening
Test Results
Communicating test results. The central goal of HIV screening in health-care settings is to maximize the number
of persons who are aware of their HIV infection and receive care and prevention services. Definitive mechanisms
should be established to inform patients of their test results. HIV-negative test results may be conveyed without
direct personal contact between the patient and the health-care provider. Persons known to be at high risk for
HIV infection also should be advised of the need for periodic retesting and should be offered prevention counseling
or referred for prevention counseling. HIV-positive
test results should be communicated confidentially
through personal contact by a clinician, nurse, mid-level practitioner, counselor, or other skilled staff. Because of the risk
of stigma and discrimination, family or friends should not be used as interpreters to disclose
HIV-positive test results to patients with limited English proficiency. Active efforts are essential to ensure that HIV-infected patients
receive their positive test results and linkage to clinical care, counseling, support, and prevention services. If the
necessary expertise is not available in the health-care venue in which screening is performed, arrangements should be made
to obtain necessary services from another clinical provider, local health department, or community-based
organization.
Health-care providers should be aware that the Privacy Rule under the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) prohibits use or disclosure of a patient's health information, including
HIV status, without the patient's permission.
Rapid HIV tests. Because of the time that elapses
before results of conventional HIV tests are available,
providing patients with their test results can be resource intensive and challenging for screening programs,
especially in episodic care settings (e.g., EDs, urgent-care clinics, and STD clinics) in which continuing
relationships with patients typically do not exist. The use of rapid HIV tests can substantially decrease the number of persons who
fail to learn their test results and reduce the resources expended to locate persons identified as HIV infected.
Positive rapid HIV test results are preliminary and must be confirmed before the diagnosis of HIV infection is
established (111).
Participants in HIV vaccine trials. Recipients of preventive HIV vaccines might have
vaccine-induced antibodies that are detectable by HIV antibody tests. Persons whose test results are HIV positive and who
are identified as vaccine trial participants might not be infected with HIV and should be encouraged to contact
or return to their trial site or an associated trial site for the confirmatory testing necessary to determine their
HIV status.
Documenting HIV test results. Positive or negative HIV test results should be documented in the
patient's confidential medical record and should be readily available to all health-care providers involved in the
patient's clinical management. The HIV test result of a pregnant woman also should be documented in the medical record
of her infant. If the mother's HIV test result is positive, maternal health-care providers should, after obtaining
consent from the mother, notify pediatric care providers of the impending birth of an HIV-exposed infant and of
any anticipated complications. If HIV is diagnosed in the
infant first, health-care providers should discuss
the implications for the mother's health and help her to
obtain care.
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Clinical Care for HIV-Infected Persons
Persons with a diagnosis of HIV infection need a thorough evaluation of their clinical status and immune function
to determine their need for antiretroviral treatment or other therapy. HIV-infected persons should receive or be referred
for clinical care promptly, consistent with USPHS guidelines for management of HIV-infected persons
(96). HIV-exposed infants should receive appropriate antiretroviral prophylaxis to prevent perinatal HIV transmission as soon as
possible after birth (42) and begin trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole prophylaxis at age 4--6 weeks to prevent
Pneumocystis pneumonia (112). They should receive subsequent clinical monitoring and diagnostic testing to determine their
HIV infection status (113).
Partner Counseling and Referral
When HIV infection is diagnosed, health-care providers should strongly encourage patients to disclose their
HIV status to their spouses, current sex partners, and previous sex partners and recommend that these partners be tested
for HIV infection. Health departments can assist patients by notifying, counseling, and providing HIV testing for
partners without disclosing the patient's identity
(114). Providers should inform patients who receive a new diagnosis of
HIV infection that they might be contacted by health department staff for a voluntary interview to discuss notification
of their partners.
Special Considerations for Screening Adolescents
Although parental involvement in an adolescent's health care is usually desirable, it typically is not required when
the adolescent consents to HIV testing. However, laws concerning consent and confidentiality for HIV care differ
among states (79). Public health statutes and legal precedents allow for evaluation and treatment of minors for STDs
without parental knowledge or consent, but not every state has defined HIV infection explicitly as a condition for which
testing
or treatment may proceed without parental consent. Health-care providers should endeavor to respect an
adolescent's request for privacy (79). HIV screening should be discussed with all adolescents and encouraged for those who
are sexually active. Providing information regarding HIV infection, HIV testing, HIV transmission, and implications
of infection should be regarded as an essential component of the anticipatory guidance
provided to all adolescents as part of primary care
(79).
Prevention Services for HIV-Negative Persons
Risk screening. HIV screening should not be contingent on an assessment of patients' behavioral risks.
However, assessment of risk for infection with HIV and other STDs and provision of prevention information should
be incorporated into routine primary care of all sexually
active persons when doing so does not pose a barrier to
HIV testing. Even when risk information is not sought, notifying a patient that routine HIV testing will be
performed might result in acknowledgement of risk behaviors and offers an opportunity to discuss HIV infection and how
it can be prevented. Patients found to have risk behaviors (e.g., MSM or heterosexuals who have multiple sex
partners, persons who have received a recent diagnosis
of an STD, persons who exchange sex for money or drugs, or
persons who engage in substance abuse) and those who want assistance with changing behaviors should be provided with
or referred to HIV risk-reduction services (e.g., drug treatment, STD treatment, and
prevention counseling).
Prevention counseling. In health-care settings, prevention counseling need not be linked explicitly to HIV
testing. However, because certain patients might be more likely to think about HIV and consider their risks at the time
of HIV testing, testing might present an ideal opportunity
to provide or arrange for prevention counseling to
assist with behavior changes that can reduce risks for acquiring HIV infection. Prevention counseling should be offered
or made available through referral in all health-care facilities serving patients at high risk for HIV and at facilities
(e.g., STD clinics) in which information on HIV risk behaviors is elicited routinely.
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HIV/AIDS Surveillance
Risk-factor ascertainment for HIV-infected
persons. CDC recommends that providers ascertain and document
all known HIV risk factors (115). Health-care providers can obtain tools and materials to assist with ascertainment
and receive guidance on risk factors as defined for surveillance purposes from HIV/AIDS surveillance professionals
in their state or local health jurisdiction. This risk-factor information is important for guiding public health
decisions, especially for prevention and care, at
clinical, local, state, and national levels.
HIV/AIDS case reporting. All states require that health-care providers report AIDS cases and persons with
a diagnosis of HIV infection to the state or
localhealth department. Case report forms are available from the state
or local health jurisdiction.
Pediatric exposure reporting. CDC and the Council for State and Territorial Epidemiologists recommend that
all states and territories conduct surveillance for perinatal HIV exposure and contact providers after
receiving reports of exposed infants to determine the infant's HIV-infection status. Information concerning dates of maternal HIV
tests, receipt of prenatal care, maternal and neonatal receipt of antiretroviral drugs, mode of delivery, and breastfeeding
is collected on the pediatric HIV/AIDS case report form
(115).
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Monitoring and Evaluation
Recommended thresholds for screening are based on
estimates of the prevalence of undiagnosed HIV infection in
U.S. health-care settings, for which no accurate recent data exist. The optimal frequency for retesting is not yet known.
Cost-effectiveness parameters for HIV screening were based on
existing program models, all of which include a
substantial counseling component, and did not consistently consider secondary infections averted as a benefit of screening. To
assess the need for revised thresholds for screening adults and adolescents or repeat screening of pregnant women and
to confirm their continued effectiveness, screening programs should monitor the yield of new diagnoses of HIV
infection, monitor costs, and evaluate whether patients with a diagnosis of HIV infection are linked to and remain engaged in
care. With minor modifications, laboratory information systems might provide a practical alternative for clinicians to use
in determining HIV prevalence among their patients who are screened for HIV.
Primary Prevention and HIV Testing in Nonclinical Settings
These revised recommendations are designed to increase HIV screening in health-care settings. Often, however,
the population most at risk for HIV includes persons who are least likely to interact with the conventional
health-care system (47,116). The need to maintain primary prevention
activities, identify persons at high risk for HIV who
could benefit from prevention services, and provide HIV testing for persons who are at high risk for HIV in nonclinical
venues remains undiminished. New approaches (e.g., enlisting HIV-infected persons and HIV-negative persons at high risk
for HIV to recruit persons from their social, sexual, and drug-use networks for counseling, testing, and referral)
have demonstrated considerable efficacy for identifying persons who were previously unaware of their HIV infection
(117).
Regulatory and Legal Considerations
These public health recommendations are based on best practices and are intended to comply fully with the
ethical principles of informed consent (67). Legislation related to HIV and AIDS has been enacted in every state and
the District of Columbia (118), and specific requirements
related to informed consent and pretest counseling differ
among states (119). Certain states, local jurisdictions, or agencies might have statutory or other regulatory impediments to
opt-out screening, or they might impose other specific requirements for counseling, written consent, confirmatory testing,
or communicating HIV test results that conflict with these recommendations. Where such policies exist,
jurisdictions should consider strategies to best implement these recommendations within current parameters and consider steps
to resolve conflicts with these recommendations.
Other Guidelines
Issues that fall outside the scope of these recommendations are addressed by other USPHS guidelines (Box 1).
Because concepts relevant to HIV management evolve rapidly, USPHS updates recommendations periodically. Current
updates are available from the National Institutes of Health at
http://AIDSinfo.nih.gov. Additional guidelines have
been published by CDC and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office for Civil Rights
(Box 2).
Acknowledgment
Ida M. Onorato, MD, Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB
Prevention (proposed), contributed to the writing and revision of this report.
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review of published research, 1985--1997. Am J Public Health 1999;89:1397--405.
Kamb ML, Fishbein M, Douglas JM, et al. Efficacy of risk-reduction counseling to prevent human immunodeficiency virus and
sexually transmitted diseases: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA 1998;280:1161--7.
EXPLORE Study Team. Effects of a behavioural intervention to
reduce acquisition of HIV infection among men who have sex with men:
the EXPLORE randomised controlled study. Lancet 2004;364:41--50.
Lubelchek R, Kroc K, Hota B, et al. The role of rapid vs conventional human immunodeficiency virus testing for inpatients: effects on
quality of care. Arch Intern Med 2005;165:1956--60.
Halpern SD. HIV testing without consent in critically ill patients. JAMA 2005;294:734--7.
Kahn JO, Walker BD. Acute human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection. N Engl J Med 1998;339:33--9.
Celum CL, Buchbinder SP, Donnell D, et al. Early human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in the HIV Network for Prevention
Trials vaccine preparedness cohort: risk behaviors, symptoms, and
early plasma and genital tract virus load. J Infect Dis 2001;183:23--35.
US Department of Health and Human Services, Panel on Clinical Practices for Treatment of HIV Infection. Guidelines for the use
of antiretroviral agents in HIV-1--infected adults and adolescents. Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services; 2006.
Available at
http://www.aidsinfo.nih.gov/ContentFiles/AdultandAdolescentGL.pdf.
Weintrob AC, Giner J, Menezes P, et al. Infrequent diagnosis of
primary human immunodeficiency virus infection: missed opportunities in
acute care settings. Arch Intern Med 2003;163:2097--100.
Coco A, Kleinhans E. Prevalence of primary HIV infection in symptomatic ambulatory patients. Ann Fam Med 2005;3:400--4.
Smith DE, Walker BD, Cooper DA, Rosenberg ES, Kaldor JM. Is antiretroviral treatment of primary HIV infection clinically justified on the
basis of current evidence? AIDS 2004;18:709--18.
Wawer MJ, Gray RH, Sewankambo NK, et al. Rates of HIV-1 transmission per coital act, by stage of HIV-1 infection, in Rakai, Uganda. J
Infect Dis 2005;191:1403--9.
Pilcher CD, Eron JJ, Galvin S, Gay C, Cohen MS. Acute HIV revisited: new opportunities for treatment and prevention. J Clin
Invest 2004;113:937--45.
US Department of Health and Human Services. Reducing obstetrician barriers to offering HIV testing. Washington, DC: US Department
of Health and Human Services; 2002. Report OEI-05-01-00260. Available at
http://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-05-01-00260.pdf.
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adolescent parturients undergoing routine voluntary screening, July 1987 to March 1991. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1992;167:1096--9.
Royce RA, Walter EB, Fernandez MI, Wilson TE, Ickovics JR, Simonds RJ. Barriers to universal prenatal HIV testing in 4 US locations in
1997. Am J Public Health 2001;91:727--33.
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transmissions in 25 births occurring in New York state [Abstract]. Presented at
the National HIV Prevention Conference; June 12--15, 2005; Atlanta, Georgia.
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and effectiveness in preventing perinatal transmission. Obstet Gynecol 2003;102:782--90.
Wade NA, Birkhead GS, Warren BL, et al. Abbreviated regimens of zidovudine prophylaxis and perinatal transmission of the
human immunodeficiency virus. N Engl J Med 1998;339:1409--14.
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* To eliminate the risk for postnatal transmission, HIV-infected women in the United States should not breastfeed. Support services for use of appropriate
breast milk substitutes should be provided when necessary. In international settings, UNAIDS and World Health Organization recommendations for HIV
and breastfeeding should be followed (46).
A second HIV test in the third trimester is as cost-effective as other common health interventions when HIV incidence among women of childbearing age is
>17 HIV cases per 100,000 person-years
(107). In 2004, in jurisdictions with available data on HIV case rates, a rate of 17 new HIV diagnoses per year
per 100,000 women aged 15--45 years was associated with an AIDS case rate of at least nine AIDS diagnoses per year per 100,000 women aged 15--45
years (CDC, unpublished data, 2005). As of 2004, the jurisdictions listed above exceeded these thresholds. The list of specific jurisdictions where a second test in
the third trimester is recommended will be updated periodically based on surveillance data.
Consultants
Membership List, November 2005
Chairpersons: Bernard M. Branson, MD, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention (proposed), CDC;
H. Hunter Handsfield, MD, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention (proposed) and University of Washington,
Seattle, Washington.
Presenters: Terje Anderson, National Association of People with AIDS, Silver Spring, Maryland; Yvette Calderon, MD, Albert Einstein College
of Medicine, Bronx, New York; Carlos del Rio, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia; Bambi Gaddist, PhD, South Carolina
African American HIV/AIDS Council, Columbia, South Carolina; Roberta Glaros, MA, New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York; Howard
A. Grossman, MD, American Academy of HIV Medicine, Washington, DC; Sara Guerry, MD, Los Angeles Sexually Transmitted Disease Program,
Los Angeles, California; Scott D. Halpern, MD, PhD, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Kim Hamlett-Berry, PhD, Department
of Veterans Affairs, Washington, DC; Scott Kellerman, MD, New York City Bureau of HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control, New York, New York; James
H. Lee, Texas Department of State Health Services, Austin, Texas; Jason Leider, MD, PhD, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York; A.
David Paltiel, PhD, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut; Liisa Randall, PhD, Michigan Department of Community Health,
Okemos, Michigan; Cornelis A. Rietmeijer, MD, PhD, Denver Public Health Department, Denver, Colorado; Robert A. Weinstein, MD, Rush Medical
College, Chicago, Illinois; Noel Zuniga, Bienestar Human Services, Inc., Los Angeles, California.
Moderators: John Blevins, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia; William C. Page, William C. Page, Inc., Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Consultants: Chris Aldridge, National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors, Washington, DC; Terje Anderson, National Association of
People with AIDS, Silver Spring, Maryland; Arlene Bardeguez, MD, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey; Ronald
Bayer, PhD, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York; Guthrie Birkhead, MD, Council of State and
Territorial Epidemiologists and New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York; Lora Branch, MS, Chicago Department of Public Health,
Chicago, Illinois; Daniel Bush, North Jersey Community Research Initiative, Newark, New Jersey; Ahmed Calvo, MD, Health Resources and
Services Administration, Rockville, Maryland; Sheldon Campbell, MD, PhD, College of American Pathologists and Yale University School of Medicine,
New Haven, Connecticut; Suzanne Carlberg-Racich, MPH, Midwest AIDS Training and Education Center, Chicago, Illinois; Sandra Chamblee, Glades
Health Initiative, Belle Glade, Florida; James Coleman, Whitman Walker Clinic, Inc., Takoma Park, Maryland; Kevin DeCock, MD, Global AIDS
Program, Nairobi, Kenya; Andrew De Los Reyes, Gay Men's Health Crisis, Inc., New York, New York; Carlos del Rio, Emory University School of
Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia; Marisa Duarte, MPH, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Atlanta, Georgia; Wayne Duffus, MD, PhD, South
Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, Columbia, South Carolina; Enid Eck, Kaiser Permanente, Pasadena, California; Magdalena
Esquivel, Los Angeles Department of Health Services, Los Angeles, California; Joe Fuentes, Houston Area Community Services, Inc., Houston, Texas;
Donna Futterman, MD, American Academy of Pediatrics and Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York; Bambi Gaddist, PhD, South
Carolina African American HIV/AIDS Council, Columbia, South Carolina; Roberta Glaros, MA, New York State Department of Health, Albany, New
York; Howard A. Grossman, MD, American Academy of HIV Medicine, Washington, DC; Sara Guerry, MD, Los Angeles Sexually Transmitted
Disease Program, Los Angeles, California; Scott D. Halpern, MD, PhD, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Kim Hamlett-Berry,
PhD, Department of Veterans Affairs, Washington, DC; Celine Hanson, MD, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; Wilbert Jordan, MD,
National Medical Association and Drew University, Los Angeles, California; Scott Kellerman, MD, New York City Bureau of HIV/AIDS Prevention and
Control, New York, New York; David Lanier, MD, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, Maryland; James H. Lee, Texas Department of
State Health Services, Austin, Texas; Jason Leider, MD, PhD, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York; Elisa Luna, MSW, Washington,
DC; Robert Maupin, MD, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and LSU Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, Louisiana; Jenny
McFarlane, Texas Department of State Health Services, Austin, Texas; Lynne Mofenson, MD, National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, Rockville, Maryland; Eve Mokotoff, MPH, Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists and Michigan Department of Community Health,
Detroit, Michigan; Susan Moskosky, MS, Office of Population Affairs, Rockville, Maryland; Doralba Muñoz, Union Positiva, Inc., Miami, Florida;
George Odongi, Dorchester Community Health Center, Quincy, Massachusetts; Debra Olesen, JSI Research and Training, Denver, Colorado; A. David
Paltiel, PhD, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut; Paul Palumbo, MD, Newark, New Jersey; Jim Pickett, AIDS Foundation of Chicago,
Chicago, Illinois; Pam Pitts, MPH, Tennessee Department of Health, Nashville, Tennessee; Borris Powell, Gay Men of African Descent, New York, New York;
Liisa Randall, PhD, Michigan Department of Community Health, Okemos, Michigan; Mobeen Rathore, MD, University of Florida, Jacksonville,
Florida; Cornelis A. Rietmeijer, MD, PhD, Denver Public Health Department, Denver, Colorado; Sam Rivera, Fortune Society, New York, New York;
Ruth Roman, MPH, Health Resources and Services Administration, Rockville, Maryland; Richard Rothman, MD, Johns Hopkins University and
American College of Emergency Physicians, Baltimore, Maryland; Gale Sampson-Lee, National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS, New York, New York;
John Schneider, MD, PhD, American Medical Association, Flossmoor, Illinois; Deya Smith-Starks, AIDS Healthcare Foundation, Los Angeles,
California; Nilda Soto, PROCEED, Inc., Elizabeth, New Jersey; Alice Stek, MD, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles,
California; Monica Sweeney, MD, Bedford Stuyvesant Family Health Center, Inc., and National Association of Community Health Centers, Brooklyn, New
York; Donna Sweet, MD, Wichita, Kansas; Wanda Tabora, Iniciativa Communitaria de Investigacion, San Juan, Puerto Rico; Mark Thrun, MD, Denver
Public Health, Denver, Colorado; Robert A. Weinstein, MD, Rush Medical College, Chicago, Illinois; Carmen Zorilla, MD, University of Puerto Rico School
of Medicine, San Juan, Puerto Rico; Noel Zuniga, Bienestar Human Services, Inc., Los Angeles, California.
Peer Reviewers: Connie Celum, MD, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; Daniel Kuritzkes, MD, HIV Medicine Association and Brigham
and Women's Hospital, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Thomas C. Quinn, MD, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease and Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
CDC, Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention Revised Recommendations for HIV Testing in
Health-Care Settings Project
Coordinator: Bernard M. Branson, MD, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention (proposed), CDC.
Project Manager: Samuel A. Martinez, MD, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention (proposed), CDC.
CDC Presenters: Brian Boyett, MS, Bernard M. Branson, MD, H. Irene Hall, PhD, Margaret A. Lampe, MPH, Sheryl B. Lyss, MD, Duncan
A. Mackellar, MPH, Stephanie L. Sansom, PhD, Allan W. Taylor, MD, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB
Prevention (proposed).
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Health and Human Services.References to non-CDC sites on the Internet are
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Department of Health and Human Services. CDC is not responsible for the content
of pages found at these sites. URL addresses listed in MMWR were current as of
the date of publication.
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