During the COVID-19 pandemic, the need for making testing readily available was recognized as an important factor for individuals to help make informed decisions, including to isolate or seek care, and for policymakers to control transmission. Toward this end, FIND and the Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator funded 16 rapid operational research studies and one implementation project in Africa, the Caribbean, and Asia evaluating the utility, acceptability, and feasibility of different community-based SARS-CoV-2 testing approaches. Here, we discuss common factors and challenges encountered during study implementation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
January 2023
Objectives: Assess whether near-point-of-care (POC) viral load testing at the first antenatal care visit (ANC1) increased the proportion of women taking antiretroviral therapy who were virally suppressed at delivery through expedited clinical action.
Design: Difference-in-difference analysis.
Methods: At 20 public sector facilities in Zimbabwe, 10 implemented near-POC viral load testing at ANC1 (August 2019 to November 2020) and 10 used centralized viral load testing at ANC1.
Background: Cervical cancer screening programs that use visual inspection with acetic acid to identify women with pre-cancerous lesions in Zimbabwe have had limited success due to challenges with human resource constraints and patient acceptability. Nucleic acid amplification tests for human papillomavirus (HPV) have been endorsed by the World Health Organization for cervical cancer screening, along with self-collection of samples. As evidence shows self-collected sampling to be acceptable and preferable, Zimbabwe's Ministry of Health and Child Care (MOHCC) required a comparative analysis on the agreement between self- and clinician-collected samples for testing with Hologic Aptima HPV mRNA assay, to determine if self-collected samples could be used as another method to increase coverage of cervical cancer screening programs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Near-point-of-care (POC) testing for early infant diagnosis (EID) and viral load expedites clinical action and improves outcomes but requires capital investment. We assessed whether excess capacity on existing near-POC devices used for TB diagnosis could be leveraged to increase near-POC HIV molecular testing, termed integrated testing, without compromising TB services.
Design: Preimplementation/postimplementation studies in 10 health facilities in Malawi and 8 in Zimbabwe.
Introduction: Point-of-care (POC) early infant diagnosis (EID) testing has been shown to dramatically decrease turnaround times from sample collection to caregiver result receipt and time to ART initiation for HIV-positive infants compared to centralized laboratory testing. As governments in sub-Saharan Africa implement POC EID technologies, we report on the feasibility and effectiveness of POC EID testing and the impact of same-day result delivery on rapid ART initiation within national programmes across six countries.
Methods: This pre-/post-evaluation compared centralized laboratory-based (pre) with POC (post) EID testing in 52 facilities across Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Senegal and Zimbabwe between April 2017 and October 2019 (country-dependent).
Introduction: In many low- and middle-income countries, HIV viral load (VL) testing occurs at centralized laboratories and time-to-result-delivery is lengthy, preventing timely monitoring of HIV treatment adherence. Near point-of-care (POC) devices, which are placed within health facility laboratories rather than clinics themselves (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: HIV Viral Load and Early Infant Diagnosis technologies in many high burden settings are restricted to centralized laboratory testing, leading to long result turnaround times and patient attrition. GeneXpert (Cepheid, CA, USA) is a polyvalent near point-of-care platform and is widely implemented for Xpert MTB/RIF diagnosis. This study sought to evaluate the operational feasibility of integrated HIV VL, EID and MTB/RIF testing in new GeneXpert platforms.
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