Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on HIV Test Uptake Among People Who Inject Drugs in the Context of an HIV Outbreak
Kirsten M. A. Trayner, Alan Yeung, Norah E. Palmateer, Andrew McAuley, Max Wilkinson, Julie Craik, Rebecca Metcalfe, Erica Peters, Samantha J. Shepherd, Rory N. Gunson, Daniel Carter, Laura Sills, Sharon J. Hutchinson

TL;DR
The study found that the COVID-19 pandemic reduced HIV testing among drug users in Glasgow, reversing progress made during an ongoing HIV outbreak.
Contribution
The study introduces a linked data approach to assess the impact of the pandemic on HIV testing trends among high-risk populations.
Findings
HIV testing increased among people who inject drugs before the pandemic but dropped significantly during the pandemic.
Testing rates among opioid agonist therapy patients fell from 54% to 37% during the pandemic.
Hospitalized injecting-related admission patients saw a marginal increase in testing during the pandemic.
Abstract
Glasgow, Scotland’s largest city, has been experiencing an HIV outbreak among people who inject drugs (PWID) since 2015. A key focus of the public health response has been to increase HIV testing among those at risk of infection. Our aim was to assess the impact of COVID-19 on HIV testing among PWID in Glasgow. HIV test uptake in the last 12 months was quantified among: (1) PWID recruited in six Needle Exchange Surveillance Initiative (NESI) surveys (n = 6110); linked laboratory data for (2) people prescribed opioid agonist therapy (OAT) (n = 14,527) and (3) people hospitalised for an injecting-related hospital admission (IRHA) (n = 12,621) across four time periods: pre-outbreak (2010–2014); early-outbreak (2015–2016); ongoing-outbreak (2017–2019); and COVID-19 (2020–June 21). From the pre to ongoing period, HIV testing increased: the highest among people recruited in NESI (from 28% to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Opioid Use Disorder Treatment
