Using Peer-Referral Chains with Incentives to Promote HIV Testing and Identify Undiagnosed HIV Infections Among Crack Users in San Salvador

Laura R Glasman, Julia Dickson-Gomez, Julia Lechuga, Sergey Tarima, Gloria Bodnar, Lorena Rivas de Mendoza, Laura R Glasman, Julia Dickson-Gomez, Julia Lechuga, Sergey Tarima, Gloria Bodnar, Lorena Rivas de Mendoza

Abstract

In El Salvador, crack users are at high risk for HIV but they are not targeted by efforts to promote early HIV diagnosis. We evaluated the promise of peer-referral chains with incentives to increase HIV testing and identify undiagnosed HIV infections among networks of crack users in San Salvador. For 14 months, we offered HIV testing in communities with a high prevalence of crack use. For the following 14 months, we promoted chains in which crack users from these communities referred their peers to HIV testing and received a small monetary incentive. We recorded the monthly numbers of HIV testers, and their crack use, sexual risk behaviors and test results. After launching the referral chains, the monthly numbers of HIV testers increased significantly (Z = 6.90, p < .001) and decayed more slowly (Z = 5.93, p < .001), and the total number of crack-using testers increased nearly fourfold. Testers in the peer-referral period reported fewer HIV risk behaviors, but a similar percentage (~5 %) tested HIV positive in both periods. More women than men received an HIV-positive diagnosis throughout the study (χ(2)(1, N = 799) = 4.23, p = .040). Peer-referral chains with incentives can potentially increase HIV testing among networks of crack users while retaining a focus on high-risk individuals.

Keywords: Access to health care; Central America; HIV prevention; HIV testing; Social networks.

Figures

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Fig. 1
Predicted trends in the monthly numbers of HIV testers in the self-referral and peer-referral chain with incentives periods

Source: PubMed

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