Resources

Here are some of the resources which we believe you will find very useful. Please feel free to download them to use in your organisation.

You are also allowed to make copies of the documents, as long as you do not change the content of the documents and make them available for people for free.

HIV Testing in Pregnancy - A Report
Scale-up of provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling of pregnant women: The South African experience. By Johanna Kehler, Amber Howard Cornelius, Sindi Blosse  and Promise Mthembu.
 
As early as 2002, calls were made within the public health spheres to move away from the voluntary HIV counselling and testing approach to a more ‘routine offer’ of HIV testing in public health centres in order to increase the uptake of HIV testing.
 
In 2007, UNAIDS and WHO released guidance on provider-initiated testing and recommended, amongst others, that provider-initiated opt-out testing and counselling should be prioritised in antenatal, child birth and post natal healthcare services, despite recognising that women may be more at risk than men of discrimination, violence, abandonment or ostracism when their HIV status becomes known.
 
This ‘targeting’ of women in the scale-up of HIV testing, whilst recognising women’s greater risks of rights violations in this process, arguably highlights the extent to which the ‘public health need’ of HIV testing scale-up can override the need to reduce women’s risks and vulnerabilities to HIV-related rights abuses.
 
Download the full 32-page report.
 
HIV Testing & Pregnancy - A Fact Sheet

Scale-up of provider-initiated HIV testing and counselling of pregnant women

The need to increase the uptake in HIV testing seems too often linked with a disregard of fundamental rights, particularly in the context of HIV testing during pregnancy. Human rights of informed consent, autonomy, confidentiality and non-discrimination are increasingly threatened in the course of HIV testing scale-up.

For more information, download the 2-page PDF document here.