Evidence and the Politics of Deimplementation: The Rise and Decline of the "Counseling and Testing" Paradigm for HIV Prevention at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

D. Johns, R. Bayer, A. Fairchild
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引用次数: 27

Abstract

POLICY POINTS In situations of scientific uncertainty, public health interventions, such as counseling for HIV infection, sometimes must be implemented before obtaining evidence of efficacy. The history of HIV counseling and testing, which served as the cornerstone of HIV prevention efforts at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for a quarter of a century, illustrates the influence of institutional resistance on public health decision making and the challenge of de-implementing well-established programs. CONTEXT In 1985, amid uncertainty about the accuracy of the new test for HIV, public health officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and AIDS activists agreed that counseling should always be provided both before and after testing to ensure that patients were tested voluntarily and understood the meaning of their results. As the "exceptionalist" perspective that framed HIV in the early years began to recede, the purpose of HIV test counseling shifted over the next 30 years from emphasizing consent, to providing information, to encouraging behavioral change. With this increasing emphasis on prevention, HIV test counseling faced mounting doubts about whether it "worked." The CDC finally discontinued its preferred test counseling approach in October 2014. METHODS Drawing on key informant interviews with current and former CDC officials, behavioral scientists, AIDS activists, and others, along with archival material, news reports, and scientific and governmental publications, we examined the origins, development, and decline of the CDC's "counseling and testing" paradigm for HIV prevention. FINDINGS Disagreements within the CDC emerged by the 1990s over whether test counseling could be justified on the basis of efficacy and cost. Resistance to the prospect of policy change by supporters of test counseling in the CDC, gay activists for whom counseling carried important ethical and symbolic meanings, and community organizations dependent on federal funding made it difficult for the CDC to de-implement the practice. CONCLUSIONS Analyses of changes in public health policy that emphasize the impact of research evidence produced in experimental or epidemiological inquiries may overlook key social and political factors involving resistance to deimplementation that powerfully shape the relationship between science and policy.
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证据和去实施的政治:美国疾病控制和预防中心艾滋病预防“咨询和测试”范式的兴衰。
政策要点:在科学不确定的情况下,有时必须在获得有效性证据之前实施公共卫生干预措施,例如艾滋病毒感染咨询。艾滋病毒咨询和检测的历史是美国疾病控制和预防中心(CDC)四分之一世纪以来艾滋病毒预防工作的基石,它说明了机构阻力对公共卫生决策的影响以及取消实施既定方案的挑战。1985年,在人们对新的艾滋病检测方法的准确性不确定的情况下,疾病控制和预防中心(CDC)的公共卫生官员和艾滋病活动家一致认为,在检测前后都应该提供咨询,以确保患者自愿接受检测,并了解检测结果的含义。随着早年对艾滋病毒的“例外论”观点开始消退,在接下来的30年里,艾滋病毒检测咨询的目的从强调同意转变为提供信息,再转变为鼓励行为改变。随着对预防的日益重视,艾滋病毒检测咨询面临着越来越多的关于它是否“有效”的质疑。疾病预防控制中心最终在2014年10月停止了首选的测试咨询方法。方法通过对CDC现任和前任官员、行为科学家、艾滋病活动家等人的采访,以及档案材料、新闻报道、科学和政府出版物,我们研究了CDC艾滋病预防“咨询和检测”模式的起源、发展和衰落。研究结果疾病预防控制中心内部的分歧出现在20世纪90年代,即测试咨询是否可以在疗效和成本的基础上证明是合理的。疾病预防控制中心测试咨询的支持者、同性恋活动家(他们认为咨询具有重要的道德和象征意义)以及依赖联邦资金的社区组织对政策变化的前景的抵制,使得疾病预防控制中心很难取消这种做法。结论:对公共卫生政策变化的分析强调实验或流行病学调查中产生的研究证据的影响,可能会忽视涉及抵制取消执行的关键社会和政治因素,这些因素有力地塑造了科学与政策之间的关系。
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