South Africa has made progress towards their 95-95-95 goals, yet a substantial proportion
of the population do not test regularly. In South Africa, people of low socioeconomic
status, men, people in rural areas, and those who distrust the health system have higher
rates of HIV stigma and are less likely to receive an HIV test. These individuals are
also more likely to see a traditional healer for their health care needs, making healers
an ideal group to bridge the health care utilization divide.
To reach people who otherwise may avoid testing, the team trained 15 traditional healers
to conduct HIV counseling and testing in their own "clinics"- a hut or room by their home
where they provide care to their patients (R34MH122259-01). Over six-months, with no
advertisement or community events, healers offered HIV counseling and testing to 463
individuals who visited them for unrelated services. Fifty-four (11.7%) self-reported a
positive HIV status. Of the 409 eligible participants, 316 (77%) agreed to test, and 20
(6.3%) tested positive- 95% were linked to HIV care and treatment services.
In collaboration with the Department of Health and the healer's organization, this study
will build on a successful pilot to test an expanded Healer-Initiated HIV Testing and
Linkage to Care intervention with the following testing and linkage to care components.
Healers will provide three testing services: (1) Advertise the availability of free
healer-initiated counseling and testing for their clients; (2) Offer partner-based
testing services at their facilities or client homes; and (3) Provide monthly
community-based testing outreach activities at local events (e.g., sporting events,
fairs). In addition to testing, healers will support linkage to care and treatment
adherence, offering clients accompaniment to their first clinical appointment, ongoing
adherence support/counseling in person or via WhatsApp, and a nurse/community health
worker/healer WhatsApp group to facilitate more technical support if needed. This is a
cluster randomized controlled trial (comparing standard of care (SOC) testing options vs.
SOC + enhanced testing with support of traditional healers) at 42 clinical catchment
areas to evaluate the impact this intervention.
The Specific Aims of this study are to: (1) Compare rates of HIV testing in
healer-initiated HIV counseling and testing communities vs. control communities via a
cluster randomized controlled trial in rural South Africa; (2) Assess adoption,
implementation fidelity and maintenance of healer-initiated HIV testing; and (3) Evaluate
the cost-effectiveness of healer-initiated HIV counseling and testing compared to
standard of care. This team has a proven record of engaging traditional healers to
improve patient outcomes, conducting research to evaluate and address mistrust in the
health system, HIV stigma, and developing interventions to increase HIV testing uptake.
Traditional healers are an untapped resource with the potential to reach those who
historically avoid HIV testing and they have the potential to help South Africa reach
their 95% testing targets.