HIV Screenings Regularly Recommended for All Teens and Adults Regardless of Risk

First Posted: Apr 30, 2013 10:30 AM EDT
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Whether you're hitting the club every night or in the nunnery, medical officials suggest that all teens and adults ages 15 to 65 should be regularly tested for HIV, regardless of their risk of contracting the virus.

Reports also suggest that pregnant women in particular should be tested for HIV according to the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, so as to provide preventative care during all terms that may keep the virus from spreading to the baby.

Previously, the task force had recommended HIV screening for adults and teens at increased risk for HIV - such as those who have unprotected sex with multiple partners and men who have had sex with men - as well as pregnant women.

The new guidelines expand the screening recommendations to include teens and adults who are not known to be at increased risk for HIV infection.

The task force based its recommendations on results from recent studies that found that early treatment for HIV (before patients show symptoms) lowers the risk of adverse health outcomes, including death, and reduces the risk of virus transmission during sex, according to recent reports. 

There are about 1.1 million people in the United States living with HIV infection, and about 20 percent of them don't know they have the disease, according to estimates made by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 2008.

These tests, which include both a blood and saliva test, are highly accurate with results that are readily available so that counseling and treatment can be determined following, if a positive result is found. 

HIV screening should be voluntary, and before screening, patients should be informed about the implications of a positive or negative test, the task force said. The group agrees with the CDC that HIV screening should be an opt-out screening test - that is, one that is performed unless patients decline.

The task force did not recommend an interval for when patients should return for HIV testing, but said that a reasonable approach would be to screen all teens and adults once to identify those who are HIV-positive, and repeat the screenings for those at increased risk for HIV. It may be reasonable to screen people at very high risk (such as men who have sex with men) yearly. Women should be screened during every pregnancy.

People younger than 15 or older than 65 should be screened only if they are at increased risk of HIV (for instance, if they have a new sexual partner).

The recommendations are published today (April 29) in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine.

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