|
April 2003
Guidelines for Counseling and Referral for Persons with Newly
Identified HIV Infection
This appendix summarizes key points for counseling and referring to services
persons with newly diagnosed HIV infection, as outlined in the
Revised
Guidelines for HIV Counseling, Testing, and Referral (CDC. MMWR
2001;50(No. RR-19):1-54.)
Basic information and support
- Ensure that the client receives and understands the meaning of the
test result.
- Provide psychological support and make referral for additional
psychological support if indicated.
- Ensure that the client knows where and how to obtain further
information and services.
Medical assessment and care
- Provide, or make referral for, medical evaluation, care, and treatment
(including sexually transmitted disease [STD] screening and care,
screening and treatment or vaccination for viral hepatitis, and
reproductive health services).
Prevention
- Advise client to refrain from donating blood, plasma, or organs.
- Ensure that the client has sufficient accurate information about how
HIV is transmitted and how transmission can be prevented.
- Explicitly point out and explain misconceptions regarding HIV
transmission risk associated with specific sexual behaviors or the
sharing of drug-use equipment.
- For sexually active clients, address strategies for preventing other
STDs or bloodborne infections (e.g., gonorrhea, syphilis, hepatitis B
virus, hepatitis C virus).
- Provide, or make referral for, HIV prevention counseling that focuses
on the client’s personal circumstances and risk and helps the client
set and reach explicit behavior-change goals to reduce the chance of
transmitting HIV.
- Assess need for, and provide, or make referral for, other HIV
prevention services (e.g., individual or group prevention counseling,
prevention case management).
- Provide, or make referral for, partner counseling and referral
services, in accordance with all applicable laws and regulations.
Special issues for pregnant women
- Provide information regarding the risk for perinatal HIV transmission,
ways to reduce this risk, and the prognosis for infants who become
infected.
- Provide, or make referral for, specialty care from providers who are
knowledgeable about perinatal HIV prevention.
- Provide, or make referral for, nondirective counseling regarding all
reproductive options.
Other support needs
- Assess need for, and provide, or make referral for, other support
services (e.g., drug or alcohol prevention and treatment; mental health
services; legal services; assistance with housing, food, employment,
transportation, and child care; and domestic or partner violence
services).
Follow-up
- Consider scheduling a follow-up appointment 3 to 6 months after
diagnosis to assess whether clients were able to initiate medical care,
minimize transmission risk to uninfected partners, and access other
needed services (e.g., partner counseling and referral services).
Strategies for making effective referrals
- Consult with the client to identify essential factors that (a) are
likely to influence the client’s ability to adopt or sustain behaviors
to reduce risk for HIV transmission or (b) promote health and prevent
disease progression.
- Match service referrals to the client’s self-identified needs and
priorities.
- In consultation with the client, assess and address any factors that
make completing the referral difficult (e.g., lack of transportation or
child care, work schedule, cost).
- Provide information necessary to access the referral service (e.g.,
contact name, eligibility requirements, location, hours of operation,
telephone number).
- Provide or arrange assistance when indicated (e.g., schedule the
appointment, address transportation needs).
- Obtain the client’s consent to share identifying information to help
complete and verify the referral.
- Document referrals made, the status of those referrals (i.e., whether
the referral service was accessed), reasons referrals were not accessed,
and the client’s satisfaction with the referrals.
|