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Community-based HIV prevention can boost testing, help reduce new infections

Community-based HIV prevention can boost testing, help reduce new infections

by The Daily Eye Team April 25 2014, 4:29 pm Estimated Reading Time: 0 mins, 50 secs

Communities in Africa and Thailand that worked together on HIV-prevention efforts saw not only a rise in HIV screening but a drop in new infections, according to a new study in the peer-reviewed journal The Lancet Global Health. The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health’s Project Accept – a trial conducted by the HIV Prevention Trials Network to test a combination of social, behavioral and structural HIV-prevention interventions – demonstrated that a series of community efforts boosted the number of people tested for HIV and resulted in a 14 percent reduction in new HIV infections, compared with control communities.

Much of the research was conducted in sub-Saharan Africa, which has particularly high rates of HIV. The researchers were interested not just in how the clinical trial participants’ behavior changed, but also in how these efforts affected the community as a whole, said Thomas Coates, Project Accept’s overall principal investigator and director of UCLA’s Center for World Health.

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