| Voluntary Counselling and Testing (VCT) |
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This section provides information on the following:
VCT is the confidential procedure that is followed when you decide (on a voluntary basis) to take an HIV test. As the result of the test can be life changing, it is important that you are properly counselled before you take the test. Step One Pre-test Counselling You will be assigned a code number- you will not be required to give your name. During the pre-test counselling session, which lasts between 20-45 minutes, you will be told about the test and HIV disease. Ways to cope with a positive diagnosis will be discussed. You will be able to ask questions. Step Two - Testing If you agree to take the test, you will be asked to sign a consent form (signature only). You must then supply a small sample of blood from a finger prick, or a saliva sample. Most hospitals and clinics use a rapid HIV test, which means that the results will be available within 20 minutes. If this test is not available an Elisa test will be done, which requires a larger blood sample from your arm. It also needs to be sent away to a laboratory. You will be told when to return for your results, which can take up to two weeks.
Step Three Results and Post-test Counselling Your results will be given during a post-test counselling session. The health professionals and counsellors who conduct and discuss the test with you must, by law, keep the results strictly confidential. You decide whether to tell your family and friends if you are HIV-positive.
Children over 14 years of age do not need permission from a parent or guardian to have an HIV test. Children under the age of 14 do require permission, although in emergency situations, such as after a rape when a HIV test is required, a doctor can authorise a test.
The AIDS helpline on 0800 012 322 can provide information about the nearest VCT centre for any person wanting an HIV test. Any questions a person may have about the VCT process will also be answered.
*[The percentage of government health facilities (hospitals and clinics) offering VCT has steadily increased from 53% in 2002 to 70% in 2003. Recent national statistics are not available but most provinces report a steadily increasing number of VCT sites. The 2003 provincial percentages varied widely with the Free State (96%), Mpumalanga (88%), Western Cape (80%), Limpopo (78%) and Gauteng (75%) providing the most extensive coverage, and the Northern Cape (63%), KwaZulu-Natal (54%) and the Eastern Cape (50%) providing the least.]
There is good evidence to support the fact that most people who test positive immediately modify their behaviour and therefore reduce the risk of infection for others. Testing negative also tends to encourage people to adopt safer sexual practices in the future.
It has been estimated that less than one in five people who are infected with HIV in South Africa know their status. This is why it is so important for everyone to adopt safe sexual practices as well as come forward to be tested. There is widespread concern that the uptake of VCT throughout the country is much too low, and ways of encouraging people to come forward voluntarily, are continually being explored. No country wants to undermine basic human rights by instituting compulsory mass testing. However it is a big problem when so few of the people who are infected know their status and are therefore putting their sexual partners at risk and helping to spread the disease. In addition too many people are presenting for treatment at a late stage in HIV disease, when they have become sick as a result of additional opportunistic infections such as tuberculosis or pneumonia. This makes the treatment more complicated and expensive, and the treatment outcomes are not as good.
If you are sexually active (or have been within the last 10 years) and:
If people are to come forward for testing there must be advantages. One of the most powerful reasons to get tested is the knowledge that there is appropriate support and treatment available if the test is positive. In both developed and developing countries as soon as antiretroviral treatment (ART) becomes widely available more people start to come forward for testing. The Khayelitsha antiretroviral treatment (ART) programme in the Western Cape illustrates this point nicely. Since the ART programme was launched at the Site B Clinic the number of people being tested at this clinic went from less than 1 000 in 1998 to more than 12 000 by 2002 (DOH). Such dramatic increases in VCT uptake have not been seen in the areas where ART is not available.
GET TESTED, ITS THE RIGHT THING TO DO. Further Information The consensus statement of the Joint Civil Society Monitoring Forum (JCSMF) 9th National Meeting in October 2006 entitled: Scaling up Voluntary HIV Counselling and Testing (VCT) in South Africa: Time for New Models. |
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