HIV Medicine Association Cautions Against Excessive HIV-Related Testing

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The HIV Medicine Association (HIVMA) has released new recommendations calling on HIV care providers to avoid routine use of unnecessary monitoring tests, including frequent CD4 T-cell counts and viral load tests for people on stable suppressive antiretroviral therapy.

The effort -- part of the Choosing Wisely campaign spearheaded by the American Board of Internal Medicine's ABIM Foundations -- is intended to use medical evidence to target procedures to those who need them, in an effort to use heathcare resources more efficiently.

Below is an edited excerpt from a HIVMA press release describing the effort in more detail.

HIVMA Recommends Doctors, Patients Discuss Need for Common Tests

HIVMA Joins Leading Health and Healthcare Organizations in Choosing Wisely Campaign

Arlington, VA -- February 8, 2016 -- HIV Medicine Association today released recommendations on commonly ordered, but not always necessary tests and procedures, to help patients and medical providers make the most of healthcare opportunities and resources, as part of the ABIM Foundation’s Choosing Wisely campaign. The five recommendations serve as a starting point for conversations between patients and their providers about evidence-based care.

Developed through input from specialists in HIV care, and the most recent recommendations for HIV management, HIVMA has identified five tests that physicians and patients should question:

"Providing high quality care to our patients also means not ordering unnecessary tests. Implementing these principles in our practice will save money by avoiding unnecessary tests," HIVMA Chair Dr. Carlos del Rio said.

Launched in 2012, the Choosing Wisely campaign continues to be widely recognized across the U.S. health care system as a leading effort to encourage conversations between patients and clinicians about what care is truly necessary. More than 70 medical specialty societies are partners in the effort and have collectively identified more than 400 tests and treatments they say are overused in their specialty. Consumer Reports, a partner in the Choosing Wisely, leads efforts to develop patient-friendly materials based on society recommendations and disseminates them broadly to consumers through their network of partners.

2/12/16

Source

HIV Medicine Association. HIVMA Recommends Doctors, Patients Discuss Need for Common Tests. Press release. February 8, 2016.