Table 1. Provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling in African countries, 2003–2010.
Details of PITC policy | Countries |
---|---|
No. (%) | |
Policy adopted | |
Yes | 42 (79.2) |
No | 10 (18.9) |
No information | 1 (1.9) |
Total | 53 (100) |
Year policy adopteda | |
2003 or 2004 | 10 (25.6) |
2005 or 2006 | 17 (43.6) |
2007 or 2008 | 10 (25.6) |
2009 or 2010 | 2 (5.1) |
Total | 39 (100) |
Document detailing PITC policy | |
National policy document | 35 (83.3) |
National strategic plan (excluding national policy documents) | 7 (16.7) |
Total | 42 (100) |
Clinical services or settings in which PITC was offeredb | |
Pregnant women attending antenatal clinics or PMTCT services | 42 (100) |
All patients or all adults visiting a health-care facility | 31 (73.8) |
Tuberculosis clinics or patients | 28 (66.7) |
Sexually transmitted infection clinics or patients | 19 (45.2) |
Family planning services | 6 (14.3) |
Inpatients (adult or paediatric) | 4 (9.5) |
Infants of HIV-positive mothers | 4 (9.5) |
Most-at-risk populations (e.g. men who have sex with men, injecting drug users, female sex workers and commercial sex workers) | 3 (7.1) |
Outpatient departments | 3 (7.1) |
Therapeutic feeding centres or children with malnutrition | 2 (4.8) |
Psychiatric services | 1 (2.4) |
Male circumcision services | 1 (2.4) |
HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; PITC, provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling; PMTCT, prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission.
a The date the policy was adopted could not be determined for three countries.
b The total exceeds 100% as some countries adopted PITC for more than one target population.