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RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Can network-based testing services have an impact beyond testing for HIV?

Aliza Monroe-Wise https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8843-3462 A * , Magdalena Barr-DiChiara A , Antons Mozalevskis A , Busisiwe Msimanga A , Maeve Brito de Mello A , Kafui Senya B , Niklas Luhmann A , Cheryl Case Johnson A and Rachel Baggaley A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Global HIV, Hepatitis and STI Department, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland.

B Communicable and Non Communicable Diseases Cluster, World Health Organization, Accra, Ghana.

* Correspondence to: monroewisea@who.int

Handling Editor: Lei Zhang

Sexual Health 22, SH24027 https://doi.org/10.1071/SH24027
Submitted: 1 February 2024  Accepted: 14 August 2024  Published: 7 April 2025

© 2025 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY)

Abstract

New strategies and innovations are needed to achieve ambitious global goals for the control of HIV, hepatitis B, hepatitis C and STIs. Network-based testing (NBT) services, including partner services, social network testing, and family and household testing, are a heterogeneous group of practices in which healthcare providers support clients with STIs or bloodborne infections to offer testing and/or other services to sexual or injecting partners, biological children, or household members or contacts. Although significant evidence supports the efficacy of NBT services to identify, diagnose and link to care partners and other contacts of people with HIV, there has been less direct research about NBT for viral hepatitis or STIs, or for providing prevention services to partners. Research is needed to better understand how NBT can best be utilised for multiple infections, specific populations and to achieve maximal impact. Integrating NBT service delivery to achieve testing, treatment and/or prevention for multiple infections may be efficient, and this might include dual or multiplex testing for different populations. Self-testing or self-sampling for partners may overcome barriers to testing. Providing partners who test negative with prevention options, including PrEP or hepatitis B vaccination where appropriate, might be a powerful way to expand prevention efforts for multiple pathogens. NBT is an important tool for identifying those in need of interventions; a better understanding of how to expand and integrate this tool may help achieve cross-cutting health outcomes globally.

Keywords: expedited partner therapy, hepatitis, HIV, index testing, partner services, PrEP, STIs, testing.

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