Content area

Abstract

In this paper we review the cost-effectiveness of HIV counseling and testing in various settings and populations in preventing the sexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus, and we discuss how multiple and changing goals have influenced economic evaluations of these programs. The literature indicates that these interventions are generally cost-effective if targeted to groups of infected or high-risk individuals, although there is continuing debate over the efficacy of HIV counseling and testing in changing sexual behavior. For these reasons, HIV counseling and testing programs should be part of an overall prevention strategy which also includes more intensive sexual risk-reduction interventions such as individual, small-group, and community-level approaches.

Details

Title
Cost-Effectiveness of Counseling and Testing to Prevent Sexual Transmission of HIV in the United States
Author
Farnham, Paul G; Pinkerton, Steven D; Holtgrave, David R; Johnson-Masotti, Ana P
Pages
33
Publication year
2002
Publication date
Mar 2002
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
10907165
e-ISSN
15733254
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
211244517
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2002 Plenum Publishing Corporation