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Case Study<br><br>Is the absolute requirement for informed consent before HIV testing a barrier to public health? A case report and management challenges


David Ameh
Uchendu O Uchendu
Oyedeji A Adeyemi
Readon C Ideh
Bernard E Ebruke
Grant Mackenzie
Stephen Howie
Tumani Corrah

Abstract

Clinicians in sub-Saharan Africa are faced with a major challenge of parental refusal to test their children for HIV. We present a case of a nine-month-old child with a clinical presentation suggestive of HIV infection whose mother persistently declined HIV testing of the child or herself. The case illustrates the difficulties faced by the clinicians caring for the child in an isolated location in West Africa. While not eliminating these difficulties, an opt-out approach to paediatric HIV testing in sub-Saharan Africa may increase the proportion of children who access treatment when they need it, particularly when this is backed by the development of more effective national and regional clinical and legislative frameworks for HIV testing in children.

Keywords: diagnosis, HIV/AIDS, provider-initiated testing and counselling, ‘opt-out’, stigmatisation, sub-Saharan Africa, virological testing, voluntary testing and counselling

African Journal of AIDS Research 2014, 13(1): 93–98

Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1608-5906
print ISSN: 1727-9445