“I did not see a need to get tested before, everything was going well with my health”: a qualitative study of HIV-testing decision-making in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

2018 
ABSTRACTFew studies have examined HIV-testing decision-making since the South African national HIV counseling and testing campaign in 2010–2011 and subsequent expansion in antiretroviral therapy (ART) eligibility in 2012. We describe HIV-testing decision-making and pathways to testing among participants in Pathways to Care, a cohort study of newly-diagnosed HIV-positive adults in KwaZulu-Natal. Our analysis is embedded within a theoretical framework informed by Arthur Kleinman’s work on pluralistic healthcare systems, and the concept of diagnostic itineraries (i.e., the route taken to HIV testing). We conducted 26 semi-structured interviews in 2012, within one month of participants’ diagnosis. Most (n = 22) deferred testing until they had developed symptoms, and then often sought recourse in non-biomedical settings. Of the eleven symptomatic participants who accessed professional medical services prior to testing, only three reported that a healthcare professional had offered or recommended an HIV test. A...
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