HIV counseling, testing expanding for youth. (YouthLens).Many young people in countries where HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. prevalence is high want to know their HIV status, recent studies indicate, and experts see voluntary counseling and testing Voluntary Counseling and Testing (VCT) for HIV usually involves two counseling sessions: one prior to taking the test known as "pre-test counseling" and one following the HIV test when the results are given, often referred to as "post-test counseling". (VCT VCT Voluntary Counseling and Testing VCT Vinyl Composition Tile VCT Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (ISO Country code) VCT Venture Capital Trust (UK fiscal status) ) services for youth as a useful way to address their HIV prevention and care needs. However, such services are limited and more research is needed to determine their impact. With as many as one of every two new HIV infections occurring in some countries among young people, (1) it is important to focus on youth, says Deborah Boswell, an FHI FHI Family Health International FHI Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd FHI Food for the Hungry International FHI Florida Hydrogen Initiative, Inc. (Tallahassee, Florida) expert on HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome care and support services support services Psychology Non-health care-related ancillary services–eg, transportation, financial aid, support groups, homemaker services, respite services, and other services who helped develop VCT services in Zambia. "Some countries are trying to implement and expand VCT services for youth. To ensure quality, counselors and other staff must be trained to work with young people and to be discreet, confidential, and nonjudgmental non·judg·men·tal adj. Refraining from judgment, especially one based on personal ethical standards. Adj. 1. nonjudgmental . Also, care and support services must be available, including direct referral to supportive clinicians and options after testing for those who test either positive or negative." Working on behalf of the United Nations Children's Fund United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), an affiliated agency of the United Nations. It was established in 1946 as the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund. , Boswell and colleagues at FHI recently compiled a reference guide on VCT and the needs of young people, children, pregnant women, and their partners. (2) Among key issues involving young people are the level of their demand for VCT services, the impact of VCT on their behavior, and programmatic challenges that include legal and ethical concerns, adequate counseling, and ongoing support. DEMAND FOR SERVICES In Demographic and Health Surveys in Kenya and Zimbabwe, more than 60 percent of some 6,000 males and females ages 15 to 19 years who had not undergone VCT reported that they would like to be tested. (3) In another survey of males and females ages 14 to 21 years, about 90 percent of 210 Ugandans and 75 percent of 122 Kenyans who said they had not received VCT services reported that they wanted to be tested. (4) However, in these and other studies, some young people feared testing. Some worried that their test results would be positive. Others were concerned that their test results would not remain confidential, that they might lose their partners, and that the services would be costly or be provided in inconvenient locations. In a Ugandan study of 369 young people ages 14 to 21 years who had sought VCT, young women who decided to get tested tended to do so if they were about to be married, enjoyed their partners' support, and knew their partners were willing to pay for the service. Nearly two of every three girls said their partners encouraged them to be tested. In contrast, boys were more likely to decide on their own to be tested and to pay for testing themselves. A third of boys said their decision to seek VCT testing was influenced by partners; a third, by friends; and another third, by no one. (5) IMPACT OF VCT It appears that VCT can help young people adopt safer sexual practices and even reduce their rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), but more research is needed. In a randomized ran·dom·ize tr.v. ran·dom·ized, ran·dom·iz·ing, ran·dom·iz·es To make random in arrangement, especially in order to control the variables in an experiment. trial involving some 4,000 adults in Kenya, Tanzania, and Trinidad, reduction of unprotected intercourse with non-primary partners was significantly greater among individuals who received VCT than among individuals who received only basic HIV prevention information. (6) The impact of VCT on behavior by age was not reported. But in an analysis of a subgroup of study participants, a third were 22 years or younger and nearly half were 25 years or younger. (7) In the survey conducted in Uganda and Kenya, most of the 240 who had been tested said they intended to adopt safer sexual behaviors such as sexual abstinence Sexual abstinence is the practice of voluntarily refraining from some or all aspects of sexual activity. Common reasons to deliberately abstain from the physical expression of sexual desire include religious or philosophical reasons (e.g. , monogamy monogamy: see marriage. , use of condoms, and reduction in number of sexual partners. (8) This study did not measure the impact of VCT on HIV infection rates, but a study in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. involving more than 4,000 males and females ages 15 to 25 years found that incidence of STIs decreased for those testing negative for HIV. (It did not change for those testing positive.) (9) REACHING OUT TO YOUTH Over the last 10 years, a growing number of VCT programs for adults have been established and have dealt with such challenges as recruitment, confidentiality, stigma associated with testing positive, testing procedures, and the importance of pre- and post-test counseling. Some of these programs have also begun to focus on youth. One example is the AIDS Information Center (AIC AIC Association des Infermières Canadiennes. ) in Uganda, which originally offered VCT services with adults in mind. It now has a clinic area specifically designated for young people and has developed a curriculum for youth counseling. The change came after the center analyzed its client data and found that many young people were seeking VCT services. "We began asking questions about how to be more responsive to the challenges that youth face," says Jane Harriet Namwebya, VCT technical officer at FHI, who directed the AIC project in Uganda before moving to FHI's Kenya office. "Do we need to train youth counselors? What are the challenges youth have in accessing the services? How can we support them after they have been tested?" Similarly, in Kenya, the International Centre for Reproductive Health Within the framework of WHO's definition of health[1] as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, reproductive health, or sexual health/hygiene (ICRH ICRH Institute of Circulatory and Respiratory Health (Canada) ICRH International Centre for Reproductive Health (Belgium, Kenya) ICRH Ion Cyclotron Resonance Heating ICRH Ion Cyclotron Resonant Heating ), in collaboration with the Kenyan Ministry of Health and FHI, originally set up nine VCT centers in Mombasa, offering a quick, confidential HIV test HIV test Various tests have been used to detect HIV and production of antibodies thereto; some HTs shown below are no longer actively used, but are listed for completeness and context. See HIV, Immunoblot. . (A finger prick is used to obtain blood, and a rapid assay test yields results in 15 minutes.) Realizing that they needed to do more to reach youth, project managers established three other counseling centers where trained community peer educators provide youth with HIV information. Trained counselors then work with the young people for referral to VCT testing centers, if appropriate, says Dr. Mark Hawken, ICRH project coordinator. Existing youth-oriented projects are also beginning to offer VCT services. In Uganda, for example, the Naguru Teenage Information and Health Center, which runs a large outreach effort through radio, expanded its existing youth reproductive health services by adding the laboratory equipment and training needed to offer VCT as well. PROGRAMMATIC CHALLENGES In these expanded efforts to provide VCT services to young people, key programmatic challenges are confidentiality, parental consent Parental consent laws (also known as parental involvement or parental notification laws) in some countries require that one or more parents consent to or be notified before their minor child can legally engage in certain activities. , adequate counseling, and ongoing support. Unless VCT is strictly confidential, young people (especially women) run the risk--as do adults--of being stigmatized, suffering violence, and being disowned dis·own tr.v. dis·owned, dis·own·ing, dis·owns To refuse to acknowledge or accept as one's own; repudiate. by family members or partners. One of the key challenges for programs is deciding whether to involve a youth's parents in the VCT process, gaining approval for testing and reporting of results. Ideally, each country would determine informed consent procedures for using VCT. In Kenya, national VCT guidelines issued in 2001 advise that "mature minors" do not need parental consent. "Mature minors" include those individuals younger than 18 years who are "married, pregnant, parents, engaged in behavior that puts them at risk, or are child sex workers." (10) In countries where such formal guidelines do not exist, agency policies and individual counselors use various approaches to determine whether parental permission is needed. "Before HIV testing is done, it is important for counselors to establish the degree of maturity of the youth in terms of ability to handle the HIV test results," says Namwebya. "A lot is left to the counselor's judgment." Effective pre-test counseling would explore such issues as youths' support systems, whom they have told they might get tested, and with whom they would share the results. Youth deemed to have the maturity to accept test results are given the opportunity to learn their HIV status and obtain support and counseling without having to tell their parents and risking negative consequences. Counseling young people, in general, requires special skills. And counseling youth about HIV testing is even more challenging. It is important to be nonjudgmental, establish rapport, and instill in·still v. To pour in drop by drop. in stil·la tion n. hope in
young people, particularly those testing positive. "Counselors have
to be trained to handle young people's needs, which differ from
those of adults," says Namwebya. "Young people who are HIV
positive still have their dreams and many years ahead. What will happen
to their dreams? How long can they sustain behavior change Behavior change refers to any transformation or modification of human behavior. Such changes can occur intentionally, through behavior modification, without intention, or change rapidly in situations of mental illness. ? We should be
able to help them cope."
REFERENCES (1.) AIDS Epidemic Update. December 2001. United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS. Available: http://www.unaids.org/epidemic_update/ report_dec01/index.html#full. (2.) Boswell D, Baggaley R. Voluntary Counseling and Testing: A Reference Guide--Responding to the Needs of Young People, Children, Pregnant Women and their Partners. Arlington, VA: Family Health International, 2002. (3.) Kenya Demographic and Health Survey 1998. Calverton, MD: National Council for Population and Development and Macro International, Inc., 1999; Zimbabwe Demographic and Health Survey 1999. Calverton, MD: Central Statistical Office and Macro International, Inc., 2000. (4.) Horizons Program. HIV Voluntary Counseling and Testing among Youth: Results from an Exploratory Study in Nairobi, Kenya, and Kampala and Masaka, Uganda. Washington: Population Council, 2001. (5.) Juma M, McCauley A, Kirumira E, et al. Gender variations in uptake of VCT services among youth in Uganda. The XIV International Conference on HIV/AIDS, Barcelona, Spain, July 7-12, 2002. (6.) The Voluntary HIV-1 Counseling and Testing Efficacy Study Group. Efficacy of voluntary HIV-1 counselling and testing in individuals and couples in Kenya, Tanzania, and Trinidad: a randomized trial. Lancet 2000;356(9224):103-12. (7.) Sangiwa MG, van der Straten A, Grinstead OA, et al. Clients' perspectives of the role of voluntary counseling and testing in HIV/AIDS prevention and care in Dar Es Salaam Dar es Salaam Largest city (pop., 1995 est.: 1,747,000), capital, and major port of Tanzania. Founded in 1862 by the sultan of Zanzibar, it came under the German East Africa Co. in 1887. , Tanzania: the Voluntary Counseling and Testing Efficacy Study. AIDS Behavior 2000; 4(1):35-48. (8.) Horizons Program. (9.) Chamot E, Coughlin SS, Farley TA, et al. Gonorrhoea gonorrhoea or esp US gonorrhea Noun a sexually transmitted disease that causes inflammation and a discharge from the genital organs [Greek gonos semen + rhoia flux] Noun 1. incidence and HIV testing and counseling among adolescents and young adults seen at a clinic for sexually transmitted diseases Sexually transmitted diseases Infections that are acquired and transmitted by sexual contact. Although virtually any infection may be transmitted during intimate contact, the term sexually transmitted disease is restricted to conditions that are largely . AIDS 1999;13(8):971-79. (10.) Kenya Ministry of Health, National AIDS and STD (Subscriber Trunk Dialing) Long distance dialing outside of the U.S. that does not require operator intervention. STD prefix codes are required and billing is based on call units, which are a fixed amount of money in the currency of that country. Control Programme. National Guidelines for Voluntary Counseling and Testing. (Nairobi: NASCOP NASCOP National AIDS and STD Control Programme (Kenya) NASCOP NASA Communications Operating Procedures , 2001)5. William Finger works on information dissemination for YouthNet, a five-year program coordinated by FHI and funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development to improve reproductive health and prevent HIV/AIDS among young people. YouthLens is an activity of YouthNet. |
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