Canada: Women Opting Out of HIV Testing More Likely to Have HIVDecember 28, 2007 Women in prenatal care who chose not to be screened for HIV were more likely to be infected than those who opted to be tested, according to a new Canadian study. In a review of more than 110,000 women in Alberta receiving prenatal infectious-disease screening from 2002 to 2004, fewer than 4 percent opted out of HIV testing, reported University of Alberta's Dr. Ameeta E. Singh and associates. Reasons for opting out could not be determined, as the identities of women were unknown at the time of analysis, the team said. However, newly diagnosed HIV prevalence among the opt-out group was 3.3 times greater than those who were tested (0.07 percent vs. 0.02 percent), the authors report. The full report, "HIV Seroprevalence Among Women Opting Out of Prenatal HIV Screening in Alberta, Canada: 2002-2004," was published in Clinical Infectious Diseases (2007;45(12):1640-1643). Back to other news for December 2007 Reuters Health 12.24.2007 This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update.
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