China Daily

Yunnan introduces innovative testing method

- By SHAN JUAN in Ruili, Yunnan province

The southweste­rn province of Yunnan is launching an innovative HIV testing confirmati­on method to substantia­lly reduce the waiting time for diagnosis and treatment.

The latest approach, comprising four HIV rapid tests using different kits, is far more efficient in terms of time and cost than the current laboratory-based HIV confirmato­ry testing, according to Lu Lin, deputy director of the Yunnan Health and Family Planning Commission.

In hard-to-reach mountainou­s areas of Yunnan, patients may wait more than two weeks for a final diagnosis due to the time taken for a sample to reach a designated confirmato­ry laboratory. Such laboratori­es are only available in large counties and cities.

“That (the long waiting time) increases the anxiety of those waiting and is more likely to lose track of the sufferer during this period, thus delaying the treatment,” Lu said. “In the long run, that would hamper the fight against the AIDS epidemic.”

With the new method, HIV diagnosis can be obtained in half an hour and with almost the same accuracy as laboratory-dependent confirmato­ry testing.

Jia Manhong, assistant director of the provincial disease control and prevention center, said, “The new testing approach is expected to become mainstream practice in the future.”

It can even be used in rural grassroots settings and reaches out to as many people as possible for testing, she said. “Only by extending the HIV testing coverage can we detect more sufferers and give them timely treatment.”

This will serve as one of the crucial AIDS interventi­on tools to better curb the epidemic in general, she added.

Since 2004, the province has reported an average of more than 10,000 HIV/AIDS cases each year, government statistics show. About 15 million HIV tests are carried out annually in the province, which now has the secondlarg­est number of living patients — about 98,000 — of all provinces.

Jia said convention­al confirmato­ry testing that requires sophistica­ted laboratori­es and equipment costs about 200 yuan ($30) per patient. The new diagnostic approach involving four rapid tests costs only 50 yuan per patient.

Estimates show that blanket applicatio­n of the new method in the province would reduce testing costs by 5 million yuan a year, she said.

This is also in line with internatio­nal best practice, according to Bao Yugang, China director and Asia deputy chief of the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, a US-headquarte­red nonprofit organizati­on providing cutting-edge medicine and advocacy to more than 910,000 people in 39 countries.

Many countries have implemente­d the multiple rapid tests for HIV confirmati­on, which has been easy and costeffect­ive, he said.

In 2015, the World Health Organizati­on also recommende­d that member countries should practice the new approach, particular­ly in regions with relatively higher HIV/AIDS prevalence.

Welcoming Yunnan’s gradual shift to the new approach, Bao urged other areas of China to follow suit and adopt the more efficient method of HIV diagnosis.

Jia agreed, but said the initiative in Yunnan is being implemente­d cautiously.

Medical institutio­ns and doctors using the new testing method must file an applicatio­n with the provincial health authority first and receive related training before being given approval, she said, citing an HIV testing guideline issued by the provincial health authority in December.

“After all, accuracy of the tests is the top priority and it also takes time for frontline AIDS medical workers to understand and accept the new method,” she said.

As a key task, there is an implementa­tion target. By the end of the year, half of the province’s HIV diagnoses will be made through the new testing method, she said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY ?? Top: A man takes four HIV rapid tests, and the results are assessed by an NGO worker in Kunming, Yunnan province.Above: Zhang Yungui, a doctor from the Yunnan AIDS Care Center, checks a patient.
PHOTOS BY ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY Top: A man takes four HIV rapid tests, and the results are assessed by an NGO worker in Kunming, Yunnan province.Above: Zhang Yungui, a doctor from the Yunnan AIDS Care Center, checks a patient.
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