Willingness and Barriers to Voluntary Counselling and Testing Among Self-Perceived Healthy Adults in Tanzania

  • Munga M
  • Urassa J
  • Kisoka W
  • et al.
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Abstract

BACKGROUND Despite the ongoing efforts to promote HIV testing, the majority of adults in Tanzania remain untested, and many remain unwilling to know their HIV status. Understanding the underlying reasons for this unwillingness to test and know one's status will support the development of targeted interventions to promote the uptake of HIV testing. This paper explores the willingness of and barriers faced by self-perceived healthy individuals to test for HIV in selected districts of Tanzania. METHODS A cross-sectional survey was conducted in urban and rural wards between October 2011 and March 2012. Structured questionnaires with closed- and open-ended questions were administered to heads of randomly selected households. Information collected included socioeconomic, demographics, rural/urban backgrounds and the perceived reasons which hinder household heads/members to access and utilise HIV-testing services. Regression analysis was conducted to assess the relationship between the same factors and participants' willingness to go for an HIV test in the near future. RESULTS There were 1,429 respondents from randomly selected households interviewed, and out of these, 57.1% were women, and 42.9% were men. The mean age of all respondents was 33.6 years; men were slightly older (mean age, 37 years) than women (mean age, 34 years). Almost one-third (n=433, 30.3%) of the respondents reported having ever tested for HIV, of whom 294 (61.8%) were women, and 139 (38.2%) were men. Being educated to at least the primary school level, being an urban resident, and being female increased the probability of HIV testing by 1.7% (P

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APA

Munga, M., Urassa, J., Kisoka, W., & Mutalemwa, P. (2019). Willingness and Barriers to Voluntary Counselling and Testing Among Self-Perceived Healthy Adults in Tanzania. East African Health Research Journal, 3(1), 16–23. https://doi.org/10.24248/eahrj.v3i1.594

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