Publication | Closed Access
Barriers to and acceptability of provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling and adopting HIV-prevention behaviours in rural Uganda: A qualitative study
18
Citations
28
References
2013
Year
Family MedicineCounselingHealthcare ProvisionHiv-prevention BehavioursOutpatient SettingsFocus Group DiscussionsQualitative StudySocial SciencesRural UgandaHiv/aids CounsellingPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchSexual And Reproductive HealthAfrican DevelopmentHivCommunity HealthRural Ugandan HospitalNursingSexual HealthTreatment And PreventionRural HealthPatient EducationClinical Practice
In Uganda, a nationwide scale-up of provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling presents an opportunity to deliver HIV-prevention services to large numbers of people. In a rural Ugandan hospital, focus group discussions and key informant interviews were conducted with outpatients receiving provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling and staff to explore the HIV-prevention information, motivation and behavioural skills strengths and weaknesses, and community-level and structural barriers to provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling acceptability and HIV prevention among this population. Strengths and weakness occurred at all levels, and results suggest brief client-centred interventions during provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling may be an effective approach to increase prevention behaviours in outpatient settings.
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