Guest guest Posted May 29, 2008 Report Share Posted May 29, 2008 Dear Moderator, Re: /message/8848 This is a very interesting and important study, in line with CDC protocols. Unfortunately, the resource document mentioned as a URL at the bottom of this post seems to have been removed and therefore some questions remain unanswered. [The web link to the article is http://medicine.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document & doi=10.1371/jour\ nal.pmed.0050092 Editor] The study mentions the number of women who accepted testing. Is there any data on the percentage of mothers who opted out? Was opting out an option? It would appear that the authors used two rapid testing methods, one derived from oral fluid and the other derived from whole blood. In addition a venous sample was drawn. What was this used for? If this was used for an ELISA test, have any comparisons been drawn between these three methods used to establish the relative sensitivity and specificity as seen in their sample? Of the mothers who tested positive by rapid tests, which test was found more useful? I am also curious to know if a confirmatory test was done later and did this show if there were any false positives by the rapid tests? As some women who are not infected will receive ARV prophylaxis on the basis of a false-positive result from a rapid HIV test, were these women counselled to this effect? Thank you, Yours sincerely, Dr Deepak Batura e-mail: <d_batura@...> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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