2018
DOI: 10.1002/jia2.25139
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Social network methods for HIV case‐finding among people who inject drugs in Tajikistan

Abstract: IntroductionHIV testing programmes have struggled to reach the most marginalized populations at risk for HIV. Social network methods such as respondent‐driven sampling (RDS) and peer‐based active case‐finding (ACF) may be effective in overcoming barriers to reaching these populations. We compared the client characteristics, proportion testing HIV positive (yield), and number of new cases found through two RDS strategies and an ACF approach to HIV case‐finding among people who inject drugs (PWID) in Tajikistan.… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(28 reference statements)
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“…Though community outreach workers made substantial effort to reach out to females who inject drugs in their social networks, we had known from formative assessment that fewer females than males inject drugs, and that female injection drug users tend to be very difficult to access. This difficulty in recruiting female inject drug users is not unique to our study [7, 39, 40]. Our findings are also limited by the inclusion of individuals who reported lifetime, as opposed to recent, use of injection drugs, a necessary action to overcome bottlenecks in participant recruitment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Though community outreach workers made substantial effort to reach out to females who inject drugs in their social networks, we had known from formative assessment that fewer females than males inject drugs, and that female injection drug users tend to be very difficult to access. This difficulty in recruiting female inject drug users is not unique to our study [7, 39, 40]. Our findings are also limited by the inclusion of individuals who reported lifetime, as opposed to recent, use of injection drugs, a necessary action to overcome bottlenecks in participant recruitment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prior to APN's rollout Flagship offered passive partner testing services in which eligible PLHIV were counselled on the importance of disclosure and were offered recruitment coupons to distribute to their sexual/injecting partners (e.g. “coupon‐based recruitment” ). These coupons included information about accessing testing services.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A study by Kan et al . from Tajikistan compares the effectiveness of three network‐based approaches to recruitment and case finding among PWID . The approaches include two respondent‐driven sampling (RDS) strategies – one restricted and the other unrestricted – and an active case‐finding (ACF) strategy that involves direct outreach by peers who are living with HIV or current/former PWID.…”
Section: Improving Recruitment Testing Uptake and Case Findingmentioning
confidence: 99%