We have read with interest the short article “Study of the impact at a public health level of universal screening for the human immunodeficiency virus in an accident and emergency department”.1 We agree with the authors on the importance of interventions aimed at reducing the delay in diagnosis of infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), but we would like to make a number of comments.
First of all, we believe that there are multiple reasons for not implementing voluntary screening measures in a hospital Accident and Emergency (A&E) department. The A&E departments in our environment routinely reach saturation level, and there is also pressure from the health service itself to reduce and rationalise costs.2 In this context, adding a voluntary screening programme would not only increase costs, but would slow down the care process for all patients, especially those with a positive result. It should be noted that informing a patient that they have HIV is a task that requires expert counselling, and must be carried out in an appropriate environment and with the necessary time.3,4
Secondly, the low prevalence of new diagnoses in their study (0.15%) is striking. It is below the prevalence observed in the general population of Catalonia (0.4%)5 and in recent studies conducted in our environment (0.6%).6 We therefore wonder whether there might have been a selection bias, given the low rate of risk practices for transmission of HIV in the surveyed population.
In our opinion, rapid HIV diagnostic tests in A&E should target groups at risk for HIV transmission7 and in situations that suggest immunosuppression, such as atypical presentations of prevalent diseases,8 but not as part of a voluntary screening programme.
Please cite this article as: Argelich Ibáñez R, Juan-Serra N. Cribado del virus de la inmunodeficiencia humana: ¿es apropiado en los servicios de urgencias hospitalarios? Enferm Infecc Microbiol Clin. 2018;36:204.