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  • 标题:Individual and jurisdictional factors associated with voluntary HIV testing in Canada: results of a national survey, 2011.
  • 作者:Worthington, Catherine A. ; Calzavara, Liviana M. ; White, Samantha J.
  • 期刊名称:Canadian Journal of Public Health
  • 印刷版ISSN:0008-4263
  • 出版年度:2015
  • 期号:January
  • 语种:English
  • 出版社:Canadian Public Health Association
  • 摘要:In Canada, traditional approaches to HIV testing have targeted at-risk populations. Today, new HIV testing technologies (such as point-of-care testing) allow broader access, encouraged by policy shifts towards more general population testing (including routine opt-out testing and 'seek and treat' approaches) in many jurisdictions. (3-6) In 2006, the United States' Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) developed new HIV testing guidelines using an opt-out model, recommending that voluntary testing be integrated into routine medical practice for all adults, whether or not they engage in HIV risk behaviours. (3) In 2013, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) established national guidelines recommending voluntary HIV testing as part of standard primary care for those aged 16-64. (7)
  • 关键词:Blood donation;Blood donors;HIV testing;HIV tests

Individual and jurisdictional factors associated with voluntary HIV testing in Canada: results of a national survey, 2011.


Worthington, Catherine A. ; Calzavara, Liviana M. ; White, Samantha J. 等


Despite a range of educational campaigns and policies designed to increase voluntary human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing in Canada, one in four Canadians living with the disease are unaware of their HIV status. (1) Knowing HIV status early in the course of HIV infection is important for the well-being of a person living with HIV and for prevention of further transmission of the virus. In the absence of early diagnosis and treatment, HIV infection can rapidly progress to AIDS. (2)

In Canada, traditional approaches to HIV testing have targeted at-risk populations. Today, new HIV testing technologies (such as point-of-care testing) allow broader access, encouraged by policy shifts towards more general population testing (including routine opt-out testing and 'seek and treat' approaches) in many jurisdictions. (3-6) In 2006, the United States' Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) developed new HIV testing guidelines using an opt-out model, recommending that voluntary testing be integrated into routine medical practice for all adults, whether or not they engage in HIV risk behaviours. (3) In 2013, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) established national guidelines recommending voluntary HIV testing as part of standard primary care for those aged 16-64. (7)

Research regarding HIV testing in the general Canadian population is sparse. (8,9) A 2012 PHAC-commissioned study suggested that 37% of Canadians have ever been tested for HIV (excluding testing for insurance purposes, blood donation or research participation). (9) This represented an increase from previous PHAC HIV/AIDS surveys, from 27% in 2003 and 32% in 2006.9 Other studies have been conducted in Canada to investigate individual and geographic factors related to voluntary HIV testing. In general, those who have ever voluntarily tested tend to be younger, be sexually active, identify as a sexual minority (i.e., non-heterosexual), be knowledgeable about HIV, or live in Quebec. (8,10-12) However, while individual-level factors are necessary considerations, to better understand testing uptake in the general population, it is important to also include jurisdictional factors (including available testing modalities, regional testing campaigns, and HIV prevalence) that may influence testing. (10,13)

In the US, jurisdictional factors have been associated with voluntary HIV testing uptake. Notably, while the availability of anonymous testing is thought to promote testing at the individual level among members of specific at-risk groups (e.g., gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (MSM), (14) there is debate as to whether it is an effective HIV testing promotion tool at the general population level. (15,16) HIV testing in a jurisdiction may also be related to HIV prevalence: regionally, areas with higher-than-average HIV prevalence have been associated with increased testing uptake, though whether presence/visibility of HIV leads to testing, or whether greater testing leads to more HIV case finding is unclear. (13)

In Canada, sex and sexual orientation have a consistent relationship with voluntary testing, (9-12) as there are substantial differences between men and women in the means of exposure to HIV. In 2011, more than 60% of HIV-positive men in Canada acquired the infection from MSM contact, while more than 60% of positive women acquired it from heterosexual contact. (17) In addition, there are jurisdictional service system factors that promote testing among pregnant women: it is recommended that pregnant women be screened for HIV, although whether this is done voluntarily (opt-in) or through routine screening with right of refusal (opt-out) varies by province/territory. (18)

The objectives of this analysis were to describe voluntary HIV testing in the general population and to examine individual-level knowledge, behaviours, socio-demographic and jurisdictional factors related to testing for the general population, and separately for men and women. To our knowledge, this is the first examination of jurisdictional factors in relation to HIV testing in a national Canadian sample.

METHODS

Survey development

The survey was constructed based on a literature review, and for comparative purposes, where possible, relevant items were composed to resemble previous national HIV surveys. (9) The final survey contained socio-demographic questions and items regarding HIV/AIDS knowledge, attitudes and sexual behaviours. Given the sensitive nature of the study, the survey was pre-tested with a sample of 100 respondents. As no issues were presented, these surveys were included in the final sample. Ethics approval was obtained from the University of Toronto Research Ethics Board.

Measures

Definitions of what constitutes voluntary HIV testing vary. The most frequently utilized is VCT (Voluntary Counselling and Testing), whereby HIV testing is initiated by the individual, preceded and followed by recommended counselling, and excludes compulsory testing. According to the CDC, testing that is conducted for purposes other than HIV diagnosis, management and treatment is not considered VCT. (3) Testing associated with blood donation, insurance, immigration or research studies, for instance, is conducted primarily for reasons other than HIV management, and does not generally include pre- and post-test counselling. The World Health Organization and International Labour Organization also abide by this VCT definition of voluntary testing. (19,20) To be consistent with international consensus, we adopted this definition. Thus, survey participants reporting testing for reasons other than blood donation, insurance, immigration or research were considered voluntary testers. To determine the types of testing, participants were asked, "Have you ever been tested for HIV/AIDS for any of the following reasons?" More than a dozen options were listed. Participants could select as many reasons as desired.

Questions on socio-demographics (sex, age, educational attainment, household income, marital status, and member of a sexual minority (non-heterosexual) or visible minority group (non-White)) were included as categorical questions (Table 1). For sexual behaviours, participants were asked if they had had sexual intercourse in the previous 12 months, whether a condom was used at last intercourse, and whether they had had a casual partner in the last 12 months. The HIV/AIDS knowledge scale consisted of seven items regarding transmission, cures and vaccines. The first five items addressed transmission (kissing, sharing food, coughing and sneezing, sharing needles and intercourse). Two additional items, regarding HIV cures and vaccines, were also included: "To the best of your knowledge, can HIV/AIDS be cured?" and "To the best of your knowledge, is there an effective vaccine to prevent HIV infection?" The seven items combined produced satisfactory scale metrics for an exploratory scale (KR-20 = 0.61). Perceived knowledge was asked on a 7-point Likert scale ("How knowledgeable would you say you are about HIV/AIDS?"). Items were constructed to capture jurisdictional factors using participant province, with those residing in high HIV prevalence jurisdictions (i.e., those with the largest percentage of cumulative positive HIV test reports to December 2012, including British Columbia (19.0%), Alberta (7.8%), Ontario (43.8%) and Quebec (22.5%)) compared to lower prevalence jurisdictions (Yukon (0.1%), Northwest Territories (0.1%), Nunavut (0.0%) Saskatchewan (2.3%), Manitoba (2.5%), New Brunswick (0.5%), Nova Scotia and PEI (1.1%), and Newfoundland/Labrador (0.4%), (17) and with jurisdictions that offered anonymous testing (Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia) compared to those that did not. (21)

Survey administration

The survey was conducted in May 2011, in English or French, among participants aged 16 years or older in each province and territory. A two-stage sampling design was employed. First, participants were sampled from the general population using a random-digit-dial (RDD) method that incorporated both cellular and land-line telephone numbers. An Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system was used to manage calls, with numbers retired after one initial call and three unanswered call-backs. Once contacted, individuals entered socio-demographic information on their keypads and were asked to participate in a survey at a later date. Those who agreed were added to a panel of willing participants. At the second stage, panel members were sampled directly (with stratification by region) and contacted by a live interviewer with an invitation to complete the survey by phone or online.

The blended participation rate of 24.8% at this stage of sampling is typical for a RDD survey of this nature. (22,23) Participation was moderately higher among those who completed the survey by phone compared to those who did so online (31.1% vs. 18.4% respectively. Sampling error was [+ or -]2.1 percentage points with 95% confidence.

Analysis

Analysis was performed with Stata IC v. 13.1. All presented results are weighted to represent the Canadian population, except where indicated otherwise. Analysis consisted of bivariate and multivariate logistic regressions for the overall sample, and stratified by sex. A backwards step-wise variable selection process was used to guide modelling decisions, in addition to Hosmer-Lemeshow's Goodness of Fit test and testing of nested models. Given the high proportion of missing data on income (16.7%) and its lack of significant contribution to models and correlation with other variables, this variable was dropped from the multivariate models.

RESULTS_

The final sample consisted of 2,139 adults residing in Canada. Missing data were minimal (<5%) for all variables, with the exception of income. Most respondents (78.6%) chose to complete the survey online. In total, 88 (unweighted) individuals did not respond to the HIV testing item and were excluded from the current analysis, leaving a subsample of 2,051 (n = 2,053 weighted) for analysis.

Overall, 29.0% had voluntarily tested for HIV (24.2% of male respondents; 33.5% of female respondents). In terms of bivariate associations (Table 1), sex, age, education and sexual minority status varied significantly between voluntary testers and non-voluntary and non-testers. Voluntary testers tended to be female (p < 0.001), younger (<0.001), and more educated (p = 0.005) than non-voluntary and non-testers. In addition, 8.9% of voluntary testers identified as a sexual minority compared to 3.1% of non-voluntary and non-testers (p < 0.001). More testers (18.3% compared to 9.8% of non-voluntary and non-testers) reported having had casual sex partners (p < 0.001) over the previous 12 months. Voluntary testers also tended to be more knowledgeable about HIV (p < 0.001) and to perceive themselves as more knowledgeable (p < 0.001) than non-voluntary and nontesters. Of the two jurisdictional factors, HIV prevalence category (low or high) was significantly related to voluntary testing (p < 0.001), while the relationship between voluntary testing and anonymous testing availability approached significance (p = 0.077).

For the overall multivariate model (Table 2), a number of factors were related to voluntary testing. Those 30-59 years of age were almost twice as likely as 16-29 year olds to have had a voluntary HIV test during their lifetime (OR = 1.86, p < 0.001). In contrast, participants 60 and over were about half as likely as those 16-29 to have ever had a voluntary HIV test (OR = 0.58, p = 0.002). Both female sex and sexual minority status were associated with increased odds of lifetime voluntary HIV testing (OR = 1.80, p < 0.001 and OR = 2.08, p = 0.002 respectively). Those who reported having had a casual sexual partner in the previous 12 months were more than twice as likely to have tested voluntarily (OR = 2.29, p < 0.001) compared to all others (those who had had a partner who was not casual and those who did not engage in any sexual activity in the last 12 months). In addition, living in jurisdictions of low HIV prevalence (compared to high) was related to an approximately 40% decrease in odds of testing (OR = 0.61, p = 0.002). While HIV knowledge score was not significant, for each point, perceived HIV knowledge was associated with a 28% increase in the odds of testing (OR = 1.28, p < 0.001).

Among sex-stratified multivariate models (Table 2), different patterns emerged. For men, after controlling for marital status and regional HIV prevalence, the most salient factors related to lifetime voluntary testing were sexual minority status (OR = 5.15, p < 0.001), perceived knowledge (OR = 1.39, p < 0.001) and sexual intercourse in the previous 12 months (OR = 2.51, p < 0.001). In contrast, for women, age (OR = 1.70, p = 0.003 for those 30-59 years compared to 16-29) and having had a casual partner (OR = 2.57, p = 0.001;compared to non-casual partner or no partner) were the covariates with the largest effects (controlling for actual and perceived knowledge, sexual intercourse over the last 12 months and regional HIV prevalence). In addition, in multivariate models, while actual and perceived HIV knowledge were significant for women, only perceived knowledge was important for men. For women, perceived knowledge was associated with a 15% increase in the odds of voluntary testing for each additional point, and actual knowledge with a 16% increase in odds of testing for each correct answer. For both sexes, residing in jurisdictions with low HIV prevalence (compared to higher prevalence jurisdictions) was related to decreased odds of voluntary testing (OR = 0.61, p = 0.047 and OR = 0.60, p = 0.017 for men and women respectively).

DISCUSSION

Our results regarding lifetime voluntary HIV testing in the general Canadian population in 2011 (29.0%) were lower than estimates provided by other national studies using slightly different definitions of voluntary testing (PHAC-supported studies, which include testing for immigration, suggest 32% in 2006 and 37% in 2012;9 our results, if we included immigration, would suggest 31% lifetime voluntary HIV testing). Likely, the two-stage sampling method utilized contributed to the differences. There are several beneficial features of the two-stage sampling methodology that make it distinct from typical opt-in panels (where participants self-select). Respondents were sampled randomly from the general population, with an RDD frame using landline and cellular phone, and those who agreed to the survey were added to the panel. Additionally, because each successful IVR contact was contacted by an interviewer by phone, every sample member (online and offline) was verified by a live interviewer. In addition, compared to other sampling methodologies (including common address-based frames or landline-only RDD frames), the current method has traditionally produced better response rates and cost-effectiveness. (22,23)

In our analysis, individual factors predominated as covariates related to HIV testing (including age, sexual minority status, actual and perceived HIV knowledge, and casual sex partner), suggesting that those most at risk are more likely to test. At the jurisdictional level, while jurisdictional HIV prevalence was significantly related to voluntary HIV testing, availability of anonymous HIV testing was not a predictive factor in the multivariate model. While we must be cautious interpreting these jurisdictional results, as we did not have information on respondent moves/migration between provinces, results suggest that at the general Canadian population level, availability of anonymous testing does not promote HIV testing.

Our results also show substantial testing differences by sex, reaffirming the relationship between voluntary testing and sex. (9,10) Sexual minority status (i.e., non-heterosexual), while a predictor of voluntary testing status overall, when stratified by sex was significant only among men. It was also the most salient covariate related to testing among men, associated with a fivefold increase in odds. In contrast, among women, age and casual sexual partner were the strongest predictors of HIV testing. There were also differences by sex in terms of actual knowledge (significant for women only) and perceived knowledge (significant for men and women). Given these disparities, the dynamics between sex and testing behaviours should be considered when addressing voluntary testing through educational campaigns.

There were important limitations to the current study. First, social desirability bias (tendency of participants to alter responses to appear more favourable to others) is a concern, particularly as the survey contained sensitive questions about sexual behaviours. Interview mode may have mediated this bias, as those interviewed by phone could have been less candid than online respondents not surveyed by a live interviewer. In addition to these concerns, the survey was cross-sectional, and thus we were unable to determine whether testing status influences the covariates or vice versa. Finally, the study was not designed to capture information on key subpopulations of interest for the HIV epidemic, including Aboriginal Peoples; African, Caribbean and Black communities; and gay, bisexual, or other men who have sex with men.

HIV testing has a long, contested history in HIV prevention, but remains a central public health strategy, as it can identify new and existing HIV cases, link those who test positive for HIV to treatment and support, and promote partner notification and testing. (24,25) While voluntary testing among Canadian adults remains low, the differences among men and women demonstrated here suggest that interventions to increase HIV testing should be designed to address sex-specific testing behaviours. The relationship between jurisdictional factors and testing was not entirely clear, and the complexities of these relationships require more extensive research at both the population and the individual level.

REFERENCES

(1.) Public Health Agency of Canada. Summary: Estimates of HIV prevalence and incidence in Canada, 2011, 2012. Available at: http://www.catie.ca/sites/default/files/ Estimates-of-HIV-Prevalence-and-Incidence-in-Canada-2011.pdf (Accessed September 20, 2014).

(2.) Sabin CA, Lundgren JD. The natural history of HIV infection. Curr Opin HIV AIDS 2013;8(4):311-17.

(3.) Branson BM, Handsfield HH, Lampe MA, Janssen RS, Taylor AW, Lyss SB, Clark JE, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Revised recommendations for HIV testing of adults, adolescents, and pregnant women in health-care settings. MMWR Recommendations and Reports / Centers for Disease Control 2006;55(14):1.

(4.) DeMarco RF, Gallagher D, Bradley-Springer L, Jones SG, Visk J. Recommendations and reality: Perceived patient, provider, and policy barriers to implementing routine HIV screening and proposed solutions. Nurs Outlook 2012;60(2):72-80. doi: 10.1016/j.outlook.2011.06.002.

(5.) British Columbia Office of the Provincial Health Officer. HIV testing guidelines for the province of British Columbia, 2014. Available at: http://www.bccdc.ca/NR/rdonlyres/ B35EDEBD-98CA-48BB-AB7C-B18A357AC19D/0/HIV_GUIDE_051114.pdf (Accessed September 20, 2014).

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(7.) Public Health Agency of Canada. HIV screening and testing guide, 2013. Available at: http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/aids-sida/guide/hivstg-vihgdd-eng. php (Accessed June 9, 2014).

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(9.) EKOS Research Associates Inc. 2012 HIV/AIDS attitudinal tracking survey: Final report (prepared for Public Health Agency of Canada), 2012. Available at: http://www.ekos.com/admin/articles/038-12.pdf (Accessed September 20, 2014).

(10.) Kaai S, Bullock S, Burchell AN, Major C. Factors that affect HIV testing and counseling services among heterosexuals in Canada and the United Kingdom: An integrated review. Patient Educ Couns 2012;88(1):4 doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2011.11.011.

(11.) Choudri Y, Cule S. Factors associated with testing for HIV among females and males in Canada. Can J Infect Dis Med Microbiol 2006;17(Supplement A):42A.

(12.) Choudri Y. Patterns in factors associated with testing for HIV among the general population in Canada in the last decade. AIDS 2008- XVII International AIDS Conference: Abstract no. TUPE0472.

(13.) Du P, Camacho F, Zurlo J, Lengerich EJ. Human immunodeficiency virus testing behaviors among US adults: The roles of individual factors, legislative status, and public health resources. Sex Transm Dis 2011;38(9): 858-64.

(14.) Centre for Inner City Research, St. Michael's Hospital. An evaluation of HIV testing and counselling practices in Ontario, 2010. Available at: http://www.stmichaelshospital.com/crich/ wp-content/uploads/Ontario-HIV-testing-counseling-evaluation-2010-final-report.pdf (Accessed September 20, 2014).

(15.) Kassler WJ, Meriwether RA, Klimko TB, Peterman TA, Zaidi A. Eliminating access to anonymous HIV antibody testing in North Carolina: Effects on HIV testing and partner notification. J Acq Imm DefSynd Human Retrovirol: Official Publication of the International Retrovirology Association 1997; 14(3):281. doi: 10.1097/00042560-199703010-00013.

(16.) Hertz-Picciotto I, Lee LW, Hoyo C. HIV test-seeking before and after the restriction of anonymous testing in North Carolina. Am J Public Health 1996;86(10):1446-50. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.86.10.1446.

(17.) Public Health Agency of Canada. HIV and AIDS in Canada: Surveillance report to December 31, 2012. Surveillance and Epidemiology Division, Centre for Communicable Diseases and Infection Control, Public Health Agency of Canada, 2013. Available at: http://www.catie.ca/sites/default/ files/HIV-AIDS-Surveillence-in-Canada-2012-EN-FINAL.pdf (Accessed September 20, 2014).

(18.) Public Health Agency of Canada. HIV/AIDS epi updates, Chapter 7 Perinatal HIV transmission in Canada. Surveillance and Risk Assessment Division, Centre for Communicable Diseases and Infection Control, Public Health Agency of Canada, 2010. Available at: http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/aids-sida/ publication/epi/2010/index-eng.php (Accessed September 20, 2014).

(19.) International Labour Organization, World Health Organization. Joint ILO/ WHO guidelines on health services and HIV/AIDS. 2005. Available at: http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2005/9221175537_eng.pdf (Accessed September 20, 2014).

(20.) World Health Organization, Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS. Guidance on provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling in health facilities. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization, 2007. Available at: http://www.unicef.org/aids/files/PITCGuidance2007_Eng.pdf (Accessed September 20, 2014).

(21.) Public Health Agency of Canada. HIV/AIDS epi updates, Chapter 3 HIV Testing and Surveillance Systems in Canada. Surveillance and Risk Assessment Division, Centre for Communicable Diseases and Infection Control, Public Health Agency of Canada, 2010. Available at: http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/ aids-sida/publication/epi/2010/index-eng.php (Accessed September 20, 2014).

(22.) Yeager DS, Krosnick JA, Chang L, Javitz HS, Levendusky MS, Simpser A, Wang R. Comparing the accuracy of RDD telephone surveys and internet surveys conducted with probability and non-probability samples. Public Opin Q 2011;75(4):709-47. doi: 10.1093/poq/nfr020.

(23.) DiSogra C, Callegaro M, Hendarwan E. Recruiting probability-based web panel members using an address-based sample frame: Results from a pilot study conducted by knowledge networks, 2009. Available at: http://www. knowledgenetworks.com/ganp/docs/jsm2009/abs_jsm_2009_submitted.pdf (Accessed September 20, 2014).

(24.) Waxman MJ, Merchant RC, Celada MT, Clark MA. Perspectives on the ethical concerns and justifications of the 2006 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention HIV testing recommendations. BMC Med Ethics 2011; 12(1):24. doi: 10.1080/15265161.2011.560339.

(25.) Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network. Shifting HIV testing policies. Fact Sheet, 2007. Available at: http://www.aidslaw.ca/publications/publicationsdocEN. php?ref=713 (Accessed September 20, 2014).

Received: June 9, 2014

Accepted: October 13, 2014

Catherine A. Worthington, PhD, [1,2] Liviana M. Calzavara, PhD, [2,3] Samantha J. White, MSc, [2,3] Dan Allman, PhD, [2,3] Mark W. Tyndall, MD, ScD, FRCPC [2,4,5]

Author Affiliations

[1.] School of Public Health and Social Policy, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC

[2.] The CIHR Social Research Centre in HIV Prevention, Toronto, ON

[3.] Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON

[4.] Division of Infectious Diseases, The Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, ON

[5.] Department of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON

Correspondence: Catherine Worthington, Public Health and Social Policy,

University of Victoria, B202e, HSD, PO Box 1700 STN CSC, Victoria, BC V8W 2Y2,

Tel: 250-472-4709, E-mail: [email protected]

Conflict of Interest: None to declare.
Table 1. Socio-demographic differences between voluntary HIV
testers and non-voluntary/non-testers

Variable          Categories                  Male

                                        Non-       Voluntary
                                     voluntary/     testers
                                     non-testers

Overall           --                    75.8         24.2

Sex               Male                   --           --

                  Female

Age (years)       16-29                 24.8         21.4

                  30-59                 47.5         65.2

                  [greater than         27.8         13.4
                  or equal to]
                  60

Education         High school           23.6         19.7
                  graduate (or
                  less)

                  College graduate      32.0         30.3

                  University            44.4         49.9
                  graduate

Incomef           <  $40,000            24.6         25.1

                  $40,000-$80,000       29.7         31.2

                  >  $80,000            45.7         43.7

Marital           Single                36.9         43.6
status
                  Married               63.1         56.4

Sexual            No                    97.6         85.2
minority (non-
heterosexual)     Yes                    2.4         14.8

Visible           No                    91.5         90.6
minority
                  Yes                    8.6          9.4

Sex (in           No                    26.9         15.8
last 12
months)           Yes                   73.2         84.2

Condom            No                    78.4         71.2
use last
intercourse       Yes                   21.6         28.9

Casual            No                    93.7         85.7
partner (in
last 12 months)   Yes                    6.3         14.3

Jurisdiction      No                    27.6         23.5
has anonymous
testing           Yes                   72.4         76.5

Jurisdictional    Low                   83.3         90.7
HIV prevalence
                  High                  16.7          9.3

Variable          Categories                    Male

                                     Overall      p * (n)

Overall           --                  100.0      N/A (990)

Sex               Male                 --           --

                  Female

Age (years)       16-29                24.0    < 0.001 (990)

                  30-59                51.7

                  [greater than        24.3
                  or equal to]
                  60

Education         High school          22.7      0.276 (980)
                  graduate (or
                  less)

                  College graduate     31.6

                  University           45.8
                  graduate

Incomef           <  $40,000           24.7      0.869 (847)

                  $40,000-$80,000      30.0

                  >  $80,000           45.2

Marital           Single              38.49      0.066 (969)
status
                  Married              61.5

Sexual            No                   94.6    < 0.001 (974)
minority (non-
heterosexual)     Yes                   5.4

Visible           No                   91.2      0.687 (974)
minority
                  Yes                   8.8

Sex (in           No                   24.2    < 0.001 (972)
last 12
months)           Yes                  75.9

Condom            No                   76.4      0.042 (733)
use last
intercourse       Yes                  23.6

Casual            No                   90.5    < 0.001 (686)
partner (in
last 12 months)   Yes                   9.5

Jurisdiction      No                   26.6      0.208 (990)
has anonymous
testing           Yes                  73.4

Jurisdictional    Low                  85.1      0.003 (990)
HIV prevalence
                  High                 14.9

Variable          Categories                   Female

                                        Non-       Voluntary
                                     voluntary/     testers
                                     non-testers

Overall           --                    66.6         33.5

Sex               Male                   --           --

                  Female

Age (years)       16-29                 22.3         23.4

                  30-59                 42.6         64.6

                  [greater than         35.2         12.1
                  or equal to]
                  60

Education         High school           26.4         17.2
                  graduate (or
                  less)

                  College graduate      28.5         34.6

                  University            45.1         48.2
                  graduate

Incomef           <  $40,000            30.8         30.8

                  $40,000-$80,000       38.8         33.2

                  >  $80,000            30.5         35.9

Marital           Single                42.5         41.7
status
                  Married               57.5         58.3

Sexual            No                    96.1         95.2
minority (non-
heterosexual)     Yes                    3.9          4.8

Visible           No                    92.8         92.6
minority
                  Yes                    7.2          7.4

Sex (in           No                    38.6         21.4
last 12
months)           Yes                   61.4         78.7

Condom            No                    79.4         79.6
use last
intercourse       Yes                   20.6         20.4

Casual            No                    87.5         76.1
partner (in
last 12 months)   Yes                   12.5         23.9

Jurisdiction      No                    25.4         22.3
has anonymous
testing           Yes                   74.6         77.7

Jurisdictional    Low                   83.4         90.3
HIV prevalence
                  High                  16.6          9.7

Variable          Categories                    Female

                                     Overall      p * (n)

Overall           --                  100.0      N/A (1063)

Sex               Male                 --            --

                  Female

Age (years)       16-29                22.6    < 0.001 (1063)

                  30-59                49.9

                  [greater than        27.4
                  or equal to]
                  60

Education         High school          23.3      0.003 (1059)
                  graduate (or
                  less)

                  College graduate     30.5

                  University           46.2
                  graduate

Incomef           <  $40,000           30.8      0.182 (867)

                  $40,000-$80,000      36.8

                  >  $80,000           32.5

Marital           Single               42.2      0.800 (1026)
status
                  Married              57.8

Sexual            No                   95.8      0.490 (1037)
minority (non-
heterosexual)     Yes                   4.2

Visible           No                   92.7      0.894 (1037)
minority
                  Yes                   7.3

Sex (in           No                   32.7    < 0.001 (1023)
last 12
months)           Yes                  67.3

Condom            No                   79.5      0.937 (684)
use last
intercourse       Yes                  20.5

Casual            No                   84.5    < 0.001 (730)
partner (in
last 12 months)   Yes                  15.6

Jurisdiction      No                   24.4      0.272 (1063)
has anonymous
testing           Yes                  75.6

Jurisdictional    Low                  85.7      0.002 (1063)
HIV prevalence
                  High                 14.3

Variable          Categories                  Overall

                                        Non-       Voluntary
                                     voluntary/     testers
                                     non-testers

Overall           --                    71.0         29.0

Sex               Male                  51.5         40.2

                  Female                48.5         59.8

Age (years)       16-29                 23.6         22.6

                  30-59                 45.1         64.8

                  [greater than         31.4         12.6
                  or equal to]
                  60

Education         High school           25.0         18.2
                  graduate (or
                  less)

                  College graduate      30.3         32.9

                  University            44.8         48.9
                  graduate

Incomef           <  $40,000            27.4         28.6

                  $40,000-$80,000       33.9         32.4

                  >  $80,000            38.7         39.0

Marital           Single                39.6         42.4
status
                  Married               60.4         57.6

Sexual            No                    96.9         91.1
minority (non-
heterosexual)     Yes                    3.1          8.9

Visible           No                    92.1         91.8
minority
                  Yes                    7.9          8.2

Sex (in           No                    32.5         19.1
last 12
months)           Yes                   67.5         80.9

Condom            No                    78.8         76.1
use last
intercourse       Yes                   21.2         23.9

Casual            No                    90.2         81.7
partner (in
last 12 months)   Yes                    9.8         18.3

Jurisdiction      No                    26.5         22.8
has anonymous
testing           Yes                   73.5         77.2

Jurisdictional    Low                   83.4         90.4
HIV prevalence
                  High                  16.6          9.6

Variable          Categories                  Overall

                                     Overall      p * (n)

Overall           --                   100       N/A (2053)

Sex               Male                 48.2    < 0.001 (2053)

                  Female               51.8

Age (years)       16-29                23.3    < 0.001 (2053)

                  30-59                50.8

                  [greater than        25.9
                  or equal to]
                  60

Education         High school          23.0      0.005 (2039)
                  graduate (or
                  less)

                  College graduate     31.0

                  University           46.0
                  graduate

Incomef           <  $40,000           27.8      0.817 (1714)

                  $40,000-$80,000      33.4

                  >  $80,000           38.8

Marital           Single               40.4      0.239 (1995)
status
                  Married              59.6

Sexual            No                   95.2    < 0.001 (2012)
minority (non-
heterosexual)     Yes                   4.8

Visible           No                   92.0      0.805 (2012)
minority
                  Yes                   8.0

Sex (in           No                   28.5    < 0.001 (1996)
last 12
months)           Yes                  71.5

Condom            No                   77.9      0.248 (1416)
use last
intercourse       Yes                  22.1

Casual            No                   87.4    < 0.001 (1415)
partner (in
last 12 months)   Yes                  12.6

Jurisdiction      No                   25.5      0.077 (2053)
has anonymous
testing           Yes                  74.6

Jurisdictional    Low                  85.4    < 0.001 (2053)
HIV prevalence
                  High                 14.6

Variable      Scale            Mean (SE)
              range
                         Non-        Voluntary
                      voluntary/      testers
                      non-testers

Knowledge      1-7    5.88 (0.05)   6.08 (0.08)
  scale
Perceived      1-7    4.32 (0.05)   4.96 (0.08)
  knowledge

Variable               Mean (SE)

                Overall      P([dagger])
                                 (n)

Knowledge     5.91 (0.04)     0.031 (987)
  scale
Perceived     4.47 (0.04)   < 0.001 (987)
  knowledge

Variable                             Mean (SE)

                 Non-        Voluntary      Overall       P([double
              voluntary/      testers                    dagger]) (n)
              non-testers

Knowledge     5.81 (0.05)   6.22 (0.06)   5.93 (0.04)   < 0.001 (1063)
  scale
Perceived     4.45 (0.05)   4.87 (0.07)   4.58 (0.04)   < 0.001 (1063)
  knowledge

Variable                              Mean (SE)

                 Non-        Voluntary      Overall       P ([double
              voluntary/      testers                    dagger]) (n)
              non-testers

Knowledge     5.85 (0.04)   6.16 (0.05)   5.94 (0.03)   < 0.001 (2053)
  scale
Perceived     4.38 (0.04)   4.91 (0.05)   4.53 (0.03)   < 0.001 (2134)
  knowledge

* F-test (Chi-square corrected for survey data using Rao-Scott
correction and converted to F-statistic).

([dagger]) Annual household pre-tax income.

([double dagger]) Wald test, adjusted for weighted data.

Table 2. Multivariate logistic regression models comparing voluntary
HIV testers and non-voluntary/non-testers

Variable                   Category            OR     Std. Err.

Overall (n = 1942)
  Age (years)              16-29               1.00      --
                           30-59               1.86     0.25
                           [greater than or    0.58     0.10
                             equal to] 60
  Sex                      (Female vs. male)   1.80     0.19
  Sexual minority          (Yes vs. no)        2.08     0.49
    (non-heterosexual)
  Perceived knowledge      (Scale)             1.28     0.05
  Jurisdictional           (Low vs. high)      0.61     0.10
    HIV prevalence
  Casual partner (in       (Yes vs. not        2.29     0.40
    last 12 months)          casual/no
                             partner)
Men (n = 938)
  Marital status           Married vs.         0.64     0.11
                             unmarried
  Sexual minority          Yes vs. no          5.15     1.64
    (non-heterosexual)
  Perceived knowledge      (Scale)             1.39     0.09
  Jurisdictional           Low vs. high        0.61     0.15
    HIV prevalence
  Sexual intercourse (in   Yes vs. no          2.51     0.55
    last 12 months)
Women (n = 1019)
  Age                      16-29               1.00      --
                           30-59               1.70     0.30
                           [greater than       0.52     0.12
                             or equal
                             to] 60
  Perceived knowledge      (Scale)             1.15     0.06
  Jurisdictional           Low vs. high        0.60     0.13
    HIV prevalence
  Casual partner (in       Yes vs. not         2.57     0.73
    last 12 months)          casual/no
                             partner
  Sexual intercourse       Yes vs. no          1.40     0.23
    (in last 12 months)
  HIV knowledge            (Scale)             1.16     0.07

Variable                   Category            P > t      95% CI

Overall (n = 1942)
  Age (years)              16-29                --      --     --
                           30-59               0.000   1.43   2.42
                           [greater than or    0.002   0.41   0.83
                             equal to] 60
  Sex                      (Female vs. male)   0.000   1.46   2.23
  Sexual minority          (Yes vs. no)        0.002   1.31   3.30
    (non-heterosexual)
  Perceived knowledge      (Scale)             0.000   1.18   1.39
  Jurisdictional           (Low vs. high)      0.002   0.44   0.83
    HIV prevalence
  Casual partner (in       (Yes vs. not        0.000   1.62   3.23
    last 12 months)          casual/no
                             partner)
Men (n = 938)
  Marital status           Married vs.         0.011   0.46   0.90
                             unmarried
  Sexual minority          Yes vs. no          0.000   2.76   9.62
    (non-heterosexual)
  Perceived knowledge      (Scale)             0.000   1.22   1.59
  Jurisdictional           Low vs. high        0.047   0.38   0.99
    HIV prevalence
  Sexual intercourse (in   Yes vs. no          0.000   1.63   3.86
    last 12 months)
Women (n = 1019)
  Age                      16-29                --      --     --
                           30-59               0.003   1.21   2.40
                           [greater than       0.006   0.33   0.83
                             or equal
                             to] 60
  Perceived knowledge      (Scale)             0.010   1.03   1.28
  Jurisdictional           Low vs. high        0.017   0.39   0.91
    HIV prevalence
  Casual partner (in       Yes vs. not         0.001   1.47   4.48
    last 12 months)          casual/no
                             partner
  Sexual intercourse       Yes vs. no          0.044   1.01   1.95
    (in last 12 months)
  HIV knowledge            (Scale)             0.013   1.03   1.30

--Overall sample and sex-stratified models.
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