Testingfor HIV is the only way to know if a person has HIV or not. HIV can be diagnosed using rapid diagnostic tests that provide results within minutes. However, such results should only be considered as a full diagnosis following review and confirmation by a qualified health worker.
differentiatedas HIV-1 or HIV-2. Additional testing for HIV-1 RNA or HIV-2 RNA should be performed if clinically indicated. Report test results 1 and 2. 1. HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay 2. HIV-1/HIV-2 antibody differentiation immunoassay 1. Reactive 2. Nonreactive or indeterminate HIV-1 antibodies were not confirmed and HIV-1 RNA Testingis the only way to know for sure if you have HIV. Find out whether testing is recommended for you. Many HIV tests are now quick, free, and painless. Ask your health care provider for an HIV test or use the HIV Services Locator to find a testing site near you. You can also buy an FDA-approved home testing kit at a pharmacy or
Thewidespread phenomenon of enacting HIV-specific laws to criminally punish transmission of, exposure to, or non-disclosure of HIV, is counter-active to good public health conceptions and repugnant to elementary human rights principles. The authors provide ten reasons why criminal laws and criminal prosecutions are bad strategy in the
Argumentsagainst HIV self-testing include: cost limits access to those who need testing most; false-negative results, especially during the window period, may lead to false reassurance and could promote sex between discordant partners at the time of highest infectivity; opportunities for counseling, linkage to care, and diagnosis of other Rapidantibody tests. Most of these are blood tests for HIV antibodies. Some can detect antibodies in saliva. Results are available in under 30 minutes and are as accurate as standard tests SupportFAQ Summary Depending on the test type, a person may have to wait up to 90 days after exposure for HIV to show up on test results. However, some tests can detect CDCestimates that, as of 2019, about 1.2 million people in the U.S. have HIV. In 2019, Black people accounted for 13% of the U.S. population but 40% (479,300) of people with HIV. While new HIV infections declined 8% overall from 2015 to 2019, they remained stable among Black people during that timeframe.
HIVcan be diagnosed through blood or saliva testing. Available tests include: Antigen/antibody tests. These tests usually involve drawing blood from a vein. Antigens
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  • 10 reasons to test for hiv