Feasibility and acceptability of self-testing for COVID-19 in Ethiopia: a mixed-methods study
I. Mitiku, S. Keller, A. Abera, H. Hailu, Y. Demissie, D. Melese, L. Chala, N. Madden, R. Powers, C. Mulder, R. Peregrino, A. Bedru, I. Spruijt

TL;DR
This study shows that self-testing for COVID-19 is widely accepted and feasible in Ethiopia when supported with proper education and resources.
Contribution
The study provides evidence for the feasibility and acceptability of self-testing for COVID-19 in Ethiopia, highlighting key factors for successful implementation.
Findings
94.2% of invited clients accepted and performed self-testing for COVID-19.
73.7% of clients reported they would likely use self-testing in the future.
Higher perceived infection risk and education level predicted future self-test use.
Abstract
COVID-19 self-testing can enhance early detection to prevent disease transmission. We assessed the feasibility and acceptability of COVID-19 self-testing in Ethiopia to inform the development of national self-testing guidelines. We conducted a mixed-methods study and invited clients presenting to health facilities with COVID-19 symptoms or considered high risk for infection for rapid antigen detection (Ag-RDT) self-testing, using nasal swabs. We described client characteristics, self-test, and survey results and used logistic regression to determine predictors for the likeliness of future self-test use. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 13 clients, 8 health workers, and 8 decision makers and used a thematic analysis approach. Of 359 invited clients, 338 (94.2%) accepted and performed COVID-19 self-testing. 79.9% clients experienced self-testing as very easy and 73.7%…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSARS-CoV-2 detection and testing · COVID-19 and Mental Health · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies
