Abstract
For treatment of HIV/AIDS in jails and prisons to be effective, these institutions must identify as many HIV-positive inmates as they can. We compare HIV status among a drug-addicted jail population determined through a physical examination and a voluntary HIV testing program, with self-reported status in an interview. Of 360 subjects interviewed and given physical examinations, approximately one third (110) took the voluntary HIV test and all were negative, and only 1 was identified as HIV-positive in the physical. However, 7 (2%) stated in the interview that they were HIV positive, none of whom took the HIV test. Five of the 7 also self-reported injection drug use and having shared needles. We conclude that inmate self-report is an important pathway for HIV case finding in correctional institutions.
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