HIV Testing During Pregnancy, at Delivery, and Postpartum

September 09, 2022

Purpose of This Guideline

Date of current publication: September 9, 2022
Lead author: Maria Teresa (Tess) Timoney, MS, RN, CNM
Writing group: Steven M. Fine, MD, PhD; Rona Vail, MD; Joseph P. McGowan, MD, FACP, FIDSA; Samuel T. Merrick, MD; Asa Radix, MD, MPH, PhD; Christopher J. Hoffmann, MD, MPH; Charles J. Gonzalez, MD
Committee: Medical Care Criteria Committee
Date of original publication: July 21, 2020

This guideline was developed by the New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute (NYSDOH AI) to provide clinicians in NYS with evidence-based recommendations for HIV testing of all pregnant patients, including those in labor.

The purpose is to promote universal HIV screening in pregnancy to ensure timely diagnosis of HIV and rapid initiation of antiretroviral therapy, which can prevent perinatal transmission and protect the health of patients and their infants. To meet these goals, this guideline emphasizes the following:

  • In each pregnancy, HIV testing is recommended as early as possible and again during the third trimester.
  • Expedited HIV testing during labor is required for patients without documented negative HIV status and is recommended for patients with risk factors for HIV infection.
  • Third-trimester syphilis testing is recommended for all patients, to be performed at the same time as third-trimester HIV testing.
  • HIV testing is recommended for any patient who presents with signs or symptoms of acute HIV infection during pregnancy or postpartum as well as for those with newly diagnosed sexually transmitted infections.
  • Pre-exposure prophylaxis and post-exposure prophylaxis are available and recommended for pregnant and postpartum patients with negative HIV test results who are at high risk of acquiring HIV.

Note on “experienced” and “expert” HIV care providers: Throughout this guideline, when reference is made to “experienced HIV care provider” or “expert HIV care provider,” those terms are referring to the following 2017 NYSDOH AI definitions:

  • Experienced HIV care provider: Practitioners who have been accorded HIV Experienced Provider status by the American Academy of HIV Medicine or have met the HIV Medicine Association’s definition of an experienced provider are eligible for designation as an HIV Experienced Provider in New York State. Nurse practitioners and licensed midwives who provide clinical care to individuals with HIV in collaboration with a physician may be considered HIV Experienced Providers as long as all other practice agreements are met (8 NYCRR 79-5:1; 10 NYCRR 85.36; 8 NYCRR 139-6900). Physician assistants who provide clinical care to individuals with HIV under the supervision of an HIV Specialist physician may also be considered HIV Experienced Providers (10 NYCRR 94.2)
  • Expert HIV care provider: A provider with extensive experience in the management of complex patients with HIV.

Universal HIV Screening in Pregnancy

RECOMMENDATIONS
Universal HIV Screening in Pregnancy
  • Using an FDA-approved HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay and following the standard  HIV laboratory testing algorithm, clinicians should screen all patients early in pregnancy, regardless of reported exposure, risk, or symptoms. (A2)
  • Clinicians should refer patients who test positive for HIV to an experienced HIV care provider [a] who can manage ART initiation, ideally within 3 days. (A3)
Testing for Acute HIV
  • When a patient presents with symptoms suggestive of acute HIV infection, the clinician should perform an HIV test immediately, even if a previous HIV screening test result during the current pregnancy was nonreactive. (A2)
  • Clinicians should maintain a high level of suspicion for acute HIV in all pregnant patients who present with a compatible clinical syndrome. (A3)
  • When screening for acute HIV, clinicians should obtain plasma HIV RNA testing in conjunction with HIV serologic testing, preferably with an HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay; the plasma HIV RNA test should be performed even if the HIV serologic screening test result is nonreactive or indeterminate. (A2)
  • If a patient’s plasma HIV RNA test result indicates a viral load ≥5,000 copies/mL (or ≥200 copies/mL for patients taking PrEP or PEP), the clinician should make a presumptive diagnosis of acute HIV, even if the results of screening and HIV-1/HIV-2 Ab differentiation immunoassays are nonreactive or indeterminate. (A2)
  • If a patient’s viral load is detectable but lower than the levels stated above, to rule out acute HIV infection, the clinician should repeat the plasma HIV RNA test 2 weeks after the first test, preferably with a repeat HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay. (A3)
Third Trimester HIV and Syphilis Testing
  • Before 36 weeks’ gestation (preferably between weeks 28 and 32), clinicians should repeat HIV testing for all patients with either a negative HIV test result or no documented HIV test result early in pregnancy. (A2)
  • Clinicians should repeat HIV testing in all pregnant patients who have engaged in behaviors that put them at risk of HIV acquisition during pregnancy or have acquired other STIs. (A2)
  • Clinicians should repeat syphilis testing along with HIV testing in the third trimester in all pregnant patients. (A2)
PrEP to Prevent HIV
  • If a patient with a negative HIV test result requests PrEP or reports being at risk of HIV acquisition, clinicians should provide or promptly refer the patient for PrEP services. (A1) PrEP with TDF/FTC is not contraindicated during pregnancy or while breastfeeding an infant.

Abbreviations: Ab, antibody; Ag, antigen; ART, antiretroviral therapy; CEI, Clinical Education Initiative; FDA, U.S. Food and Drug Administration; PEP, post-exposure prophylaxis; PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; STI, sexually transmitted infection; TDF/FTC, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine.

Note:

  1. CEI Line for expert consultation: Clinicians in New York State can speak with an experienced HIV care provider 24/7 regarding maternal or fetal HIV exposure by calling the CEI Line: 1-866-637-2342, option 2.
New York State Law
  • Clinicians in prenatal care settings must provide HIV-related information and recommend HIV testing for all pregnant patients, including those who present in labor if their HIV status is not documented.
  • Immediately arrange an expedited HIV test, with consent, for patients in labor when no HIV test result is documented for the current pregnancy, with results available as soon as possible.
  • Any patient who does not have a documented HIV test result during the current pregnancy and who is not known to have HIV must, with their consent, receive expedited HIV testing during labor; results must be available within 12 hours of consent and preferably within 60 minutes. All birth facilities must have the capacity to provide and perform expedited HIV testing.
    • Facilities should use a U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved HIV screening test, with results available preferably within 1 hour and no longer than 12 hours; the most sensitive screening test available should be used to allow for detection of early or acute HIV.
    • Ensure that expedited HIV test results are available prior to delivery to allow maximum benefits of intrapartum antiretroviral prophylaxis for the fetus.
    • Supplemental diagnostic testing must be obtained for all preliminary positive HIV test results in pregnant patients.
    • If a patient who presents in labor declines an HIV test, the infant is required to have an expedited HIV antibody screen at birth, with or without consent, with results available as soon as possible but no later than 12 hours after birth.
    • If the infant HIV test is reactive for HIV antibodies, a plasma sample should be collected from the infant for HIV-1 nucleic acid testing (see New York Codes, Rules and Regulations (NYCRR) Title 10, Section 69-1.3).
    • The DOH-4068 Maternal-Pediatric HIV Prevention and Care Program Test History and Assessment form must be completed for every pregnant individual presenting for delivery.
  • The hospital shall determine the need for, and ensure provision of, HIV prophylaxis and/or treatment per standard of care to prevent transmission to the infant and shall record such in both the birth parent’s and newborn’s health records (see NYCRR Title 10, Section 405.21).
  • Clinicians must discuss partner notification with patients who have been recently diagnosed with HIV, and the discussion must be documented in the medical record and on the Medical Provider Reporting Form (DOH-4189), as required by Public Health Law, Article 21, Title 3, Section 2130.

To help ensure timely diagnosis of HIV and implementation of effective measures to prevent perinatal transmission of HIV, New York State public health law mandates that all prenatal care settings regulated by the NYSDOH—including hospitals, diagnostic and treatment centers, health maintenance organizations, and birthing centers—provide information about HIV and recommend HIV testing, preferably at the first prenatal visit, to all individuals who present for care. Settings not regulated by the NYSDOH, such as some private offices, should also provide information about HIV and recommend voluntary HIV testing in accordance with NYSDOH, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) standards of care for all pregnant individuals DHHS 2021ACOG 2018.

Diagnosing HIV and initiating ART at the time of diagnosis are crucial to reducing the risk of perinatal HIV transmission and maintaining the health of pregnant patients. HIV screening at the first prenatal visit increases the likelihood that HIV will be diagnosed, ART will be initiated early during pregnancy, and viral suppression can be attained.

For pregnant patients who are diagnosed with HIV, clinicians can provide assistance with partner notification through direct referral to:

More information on partner notification assistance and resources is also available at HIV/AIDS Laws and Regulations.

Testing for Acute HIV

Repeat HIV testing in patients who have a negative HIV test result early in pregnancy and assessment for acute HIV during pregnancy are important for reducing the risk of perinatal HIV transmission. Between 2007 and 2018, 11 of 45 (24.4%) perinatal transmissions to infants in New York State were associated with acute HIV infection acquired during pregnancy or the postpartum period through breastfeeding NYSDOH 2019.

When a pregnant patient presents with symptoms suggestive of acute HIV, a plasma HIV RNA assay should be performed in conjunction with an HIV serologic screening test to diagnose acute HIV. An HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay is the recommended serologic test.

For specific recommendations and expanded guidance on diagnosing and managing acute HIV, see the NYSDOH AI guideline Diagnosis and Management of Acute HIV Infection.

Third Trimester HIV and Syphilis Testing

Throughout New York State, clinicians who provide perinatal care should perform additional HIV testing in the third trimester for all pregnant patients with an initial negative HIV test result or no prior documented HIV test result. Approximately 80% of perinatal HIV transmissions occur after week 36 Kourtis, et al. 2001; therefore, this committee recommends HIV testing be performed between weeks 28 and 32 so that HIV testing can be performed concurrently with syphilis testing (see discussion of syphilis testing, below).

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and ACOG recommend repeat HIV testing in the third trimester (before week 36) in areas with high incidence or prevalence of HIV; New York State is an area of high HIV prevalence Workowski, et al. 2021ACOG 2018, and some experts have argued that third-trimester testing should be universal Cassimatis, et al. 2021. Additionally, the CDC recommends repeat testing for chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis in the third trimester if the patient is at risk Workowski, et al. 2021; in light of increasing rates of congenital syphilis, the ACOG recommends repeat syphilis testing for all pregnant individuals in the third trimester regardless of risk ACOG 2024. Assessment for acute HIV is strongly recommended in patients who present with compatible symptoms at any time during pregnancy.

Syphilis testing: The NYSDOH highly recommends that clinicians obtain serologic screening for syphilis for all pregnant patients at the first prenatal visit, during the third trimester (28 to 32 weeks of gestation), and at delivery (see also CDC 2021 STI Treatment Guidelines and Recommended Clinician Timeline for Screening for Syphilis, HIV, HBV, HCV, Chlamydia, and Gonorrhea).

PrEP to Prevent HIV

In addition to HIV screening as part of routine antenatal care, other prevention strategies should be available to pregnant and breastfeeding patients who are at high risk of acquiring HIV, including assessment for PrEP candidacy. PrEP significantly decreases the risk of HIV transmission in heterosexual serodifferent couples Baeten, et al. 2012.

Although available data suggest that the use of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine (TDF/FTC; brand name Truvada) as PrEP does not increase the risk of congenital anomalies, studies of bone mineral density (BMD) in infants born to women taking TDF-containing antiretroviral regimens have provided conflicting results Mofenson, et al. 2017Siberry, et al. 2015Vigano, et al. 2011. One study suggested a decrease in BMD of up to 15% in infants exposed to TDF in utero compared with infants who were not exposed to TDF Siberry, et al. 2015, whereas another study found no association between in utero TDF exposure and infant BMD Vigano, et al. 2011.

KEY POINTS
  • Routine STI screening in pregnancy: Routine screening for chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis can be combined with HIV testing at the initial visit and at 28 to 32 weeks gestation.
  • Sex partner STI testing: This Committee encourages healthcare providers to recommend HIV testing for sex partner(s) of pregnant patients. During the first prenatal visit, when a clinician provides counseling about HIV and other health conditions, the care provider can suggest that a patient’s sex partner(s) undergo testing for HIV. The same suggestion can be made if a patient is diagnosed with a new STI or reports having new sex partners during pregnancy. Whenever possible, the clinician should offer direct linkage to HIV testing and prevention services for partners.
  • Universal hepatitis C virus (HCV) screening: The NYSDOH AI currently recommends universal HCV screening during each pregnancy.
  • PrEP: For patients who report behavior that places them at risk for HIV acquisition, a negative HIV test result is an opportunity to encourage PrEP use. When used as prescribed, PrEP effectively prevents HIV acquisition.
    • TDF/FTC is the preferred PrEP regimen during pregnancy and while breastfeeding.
    • When indicated, PrEP is an effective component of a comprehensive HIV prevention plan that includes counseling and education about adherence to PrEP medications, ongoing monitoring with laboratory tests, and discussion of risk-reduction strategies.
    • Repeat screening for HIV and other STIs (chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis) is part of routine PrEP management (see CDC 2021 STI Treatment Guidelines).
    • The use of antiretroviral medications during pregnancy is monitored through the Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry.
  • CEI Line for expert consultation: Clinicians in New York State can speak with an experienced HIV care provider 24/7 regarding maternal or fetal HIV exposure by calling the CEI Line: 1-866-637-2342, option 2.

HIV Testing During Labor and in Newborns

RECOMMENDATIONS
HIV Testing and Prophylaxis During Labor and in Newborns
  • When a patient in labor is not known to have HIV, does not have a documented third-trimester negative HIV test result, has been diagnosed with a sexually transmitted infection during pregnancy, or reports exposure risk for themselves or sex partners, the clinician should perform expedited HIV testing with consent and discuss the use of antiretroviral prophylaxis for the patient and the newborn [a]. (A2)
  • If the result of the expedited HIV screening test for a patient in labor is reactive, the clinician should:
    • Obtain HIV diagnostic testing according to the standard HIV laboratory testing algorithm. (A1)
    • Initiate maternal antiretroviral prophylaxis (A1); immediate initiation is recommended. (A3)
    • Administer newborn prophylaxis [b] as soon as possible after birth. (A2)
  • If supplemental diagnostic testing confirms that a patient in labor has HIV, the clinician should:
    • Ensure that an HIV diagnostic test of the infant is obtained within 48 hours of birth. The infant’s specimen should be sent to the Pediatric HIV Testing Service at the Wadsworth Center for a nucleic acid test (NAT) to detect HIV-1 RNA or DNA. (B3)
    • Make arrangements for the patient with newly diagnosed HIV to see an experienced HIV care provider and, if indicated, provide referrals for case management and support services [c]. (A3)
    • Ensure that the HIV-exposed infant is discharged from care with antiretroviral medications in hand, not just a prescription. (B3)
    • Make arrangements for the infant’s medical follow-up with an experienced pediatric HIV care provider. (A3)

Notes:

  1. Clinical Education Initiative (CEI) Line for expert consultation: Clinicians in New York State can speak with an experienced HIV care provider 24/7 regarding maternal or fetal HIV exposure by calling the CEI Line: 1-866-637-2342, option 2.
  2. See U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Recommendations for the Use of Antiretroviral Drugs in During Pregnancy and Interventions to Reduce Perinatal HIV Transmission in the United States > Management of Infants Born to People With HIV Infection.
  3. See NYSDOH AI HIV Testing, Reporting and Confidentiality in New York State 2017-18 Update: Fact Sheet and Frequently Asked Questions > FAQ 11.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved HIV-1/2 antigen/antibody combination immunoassays are recommended for expedited HIV testing during labor and delivery. These tests screen for HIV-1 and HIV-2 antibodies and the HIV-1 p24 antigen. Because the p24 antigens produced by the virus may be detectable before an individual produces antibodies, combination immunoassays are capable of detecting acute HIV-1.

HIV testing of pregnant patients and their infants in the peripartum period functions as a safety net, ensuring screening for the small number of individuals not tested earlier in pregnancy or who seroconverted during pregnancy after the initial negative HIV test result.

Preliminary positive HIV test results: Although not diagnostic of HIV, most preliminary positive HIV test results are true-positive results; the precise ratio of true-positive to false-positive test results will depend on the test used and the local prevalence of HIV. When a preliminary positive result from a rapid HIV test occurs during labor and delivery, a second rapid test may be performed using a different FDA-approved rapid test device to obtain quick verification of the initial result. If both rapid HIV test results are reactive, the likelihood of infection is high. Regardless of whether 1 or 2 rapid HIV tests are performed, supplemental testing after a preliminary positive result is required to establish a diagnosis of HIV (see the standard HIV laboratory testing algorithm for maternal testing). Clinicians should collect a plasma sample from infants with a preliminary positive result and should obtain an HIV-1 NAT.

Antiretroviral prophylaxis for pregnant patients is more likely to benefit the infant when started as soon as a patient tests positive for HIV; the benefit of infant prophylaxis decreases when initiation is delayed Fiscus, et al. 1999Wade, et al. 1998. These factors underscore the importance of initiating antiretroviral prophylaxis in pregnant patients and their infants as soon as possible and highlight the need for ongoing assessment of risk and HIV screening for patients who breastfeed. For specific prophylaxis regimens, see U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Recommendations for Use of Antiretroviral Drugs During Pregnancy and Interventions to Reduce Perinatal HIV Transmission in the United States.

KEY POINTS
  • Maternal HIV acquisition and acute infection confer a significant risk of HIV transmission to an infant who is being breastfed. Of maternal seroconversion-associated transmissions that occurred between 2007 and 2018, 4 of 11 were attributed to breastfeeding among women who acquired HIV early postpartum NYSDOH 2019.
  • The peripartum period is the final opportunity to provide antiretroviral prophylaxis and decrease the risk for perinatal HIV transmission to exposed infants of individuals who have not been previously identified as having HIV.
  • As in the prenatal and peripartum periods, when a breastfeeding patient presents with symptoms suggestive of acute HIV infection, the clinician should perform an HIV test in conjunction with a plasma HIV RNA test immediately, even if previous HIV screening tests were nonreactive.
  • Providing information about HIV and recommending HIV testing as early as possible in pregnancy is ideal.
  • Per New York State Law, if a patient who presents in labor declines an HIV test, the infant is required to have an expedited HIV antibody screen at birth, with or without consent, with results available as soon as possible but no later than 12 hours after birth.
SELECTED GOOD PRACTICE REMINDERS

HIV Testing and Prophylaxis During Labor and in Newborns

  • If the result of the expedited HIV test for a patient in labor is reactive:
    • Discuss the meaning of a preliminary positive HIV test result.
    • Do not delay prophylaxis while awaiting results of confirmatory serologic testing.
    • Inform the birth parent that HIV can be transmitted through breast milk and that breastfeeding is contraindicated until they are confirmed to be HIV negative. Refer the birth parent to a lactation specialist to assist with education and support for maintenance of breast milk supply, if so desired, so breastfeeding may be initiated if HIV infection is excluded.
  • Provide education about the benefits of antiretroviral prophylaxis for any patient with HIV who declines it for themselves or their newborn.

HIV Testing and Management Checklist

Checklist for HIV Testing and Prophylaxis During Labor and in Newborns

Checklist for HIV Testing and Prophylaxis During Labor and in Newborns

Download checklist for HIV Testing and Prophylaxis During Labor and in Newborns

All Recommendations

ALL RECOMMENDATIONS: HIV TESTING DURING PREGNANCY, AT DELIVERY, AND POSTPARTUM
Universal HIV Screening in Pregnancy
  • Using an FDA-approved HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay and following the standard  HIV laboratory testing algorithm, clinicians should screen all patients early in pregnancy, regardless of reported exposure, risk, or symptoms. (A2)
  • Clinicians should refer patients who test positive for HIV to an experienced HIV care provider [a] who can manage ART initiation, ideally within 3 days. (A3)
Testing for Acute HIV
  • When a patient presents with symptoms suggestive of acute HIV infection, the clinician should perform an HIV test immediately, even if a previous HIV screening test result during the current pregnancy was nonreactive. (A2)
  • Clinicians should maintain a high level of suspicion for acute HIV in all pregnant patients who present with a compatible clinical syndrome. (A3)
  • When screening for acute HIV, clinicians should obtain plasma HIV RNA testing in conjunction with HIV serologic testing, preferably with an HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay; the plasma HIV RNA test should be performed even if the HIV serologic screening test result is nonreactive or indeterminate. (A2)
  • If a patient’s plasma HIV RNA test result indicates a viral load ≥5,000 copies/mL (or ≥200 copies/mL for patients taking PrEP or PEP), the clinician should make a presumptive diagnosis of acute HIV, even if the results of screening and HIV-1/HIV-2 Ab differentiation immunoassays are nonreactive or indeterminate. (A2)
  • If a patient’s viral load is detectable but lower than the levels stated above, to rule out acute HIV infection, the clinician should repeat the plasma HIV RNA test 2 weeks after the first test, preferably with a repeat HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay. (A3)
Third Trimester HIV and Syphilis Testing
  • Before 36 weeks’ gestation (preferably between weeks 28 and 32), clinicians should repeat HIV testing for all patients with either a negative HIV test result or no documented HIV test result early in pregnancy. (A2)
  • Clinicians should repeat HIV testing in all pregnant patients who have engaged in behaviors that put them at risk of HIV acquisition during pregnancy or have acquired other STIs. (A2)
  • Clinicians should repeat syphilis testing along with HIV testing in the third trimester in all pregnant patients. (A2)
PrEP to Prevent HIV
  • If a patient with a negative HIV test result requests PrEP or reports being at risk of HIV acquisition, clinicians should provide or promptly refer the patient for PrEP services. (A1) PrEP with TDF/FTC is not contraindicated during pregnancy or while breastfeeding an infant.
HIV Testing and Prophylaxis During Labor and in Newborns
  • When a patient in labor is not known to have HIV, does not have a documented third-trimester negative HIV test result, has been diagnosed with a sexually transmitted infection during pregnancy, or reports exposure risk for themselves or sex partners, the clinician should perform expedited HIV testing with consent and discuss the use of antiretroviral prophylaxis for the patient and the newborn [a]. (A2)
  • If the result of the expedited HIV screening test for a patient in labor is reactive, the clinician should:
    • Obtain HIV diagnostic testing according to the standard HIV laboratory testing algorithm. (A1)
    • Initiate maternal antiretroviral prophylaxis (A1); immediate initiation is recommended. (A3)
    • Administer newborn prophylaxis [b] as soon as possible after birth. (A2)
  • If supplemental diagnostic testing confirms that a patient in labor has HIV, the clinician should:
    • Ensure that an HIV diagnostic test of the infant is obtained within 48 hours of birth. The infant’s specimen should be sent to the Pediatric HIV Testing Service at the Wadsworth Center for a nucleic acid test (NAT) to detect HIV-1 RNA or DNA. (B3)
    • Make arrangements for the patient with newly diagnosed HIV to see an experienced HIV care provider and, if indicated, provide referrals for case management and support services [c]. (A3)
    • Ensure that the HIV-exposed infant is discharged from care with antiretroviral medications in hand, not just a prescription. (B3)
    • Make arrangements for the infant’s medical follow-up with an experienced pediatric HIV care provider. (A3)

Abbreviations: Ab, antibody; Ag, antigen; ART, antiretroviral therapy; CEI, Clinical Education Initiative; FDA, U.S. Food and Drug Administration; PEP, post-exposure prophylaxis; PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; STI, sexually transmitted infection; TDF/FTC, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate/emtricitabine.

Notes:

  1. CEI Line for expert consultation: Clinicians in New York State can speak with an experienced HIV care provider 24/7 regarding maternal or fetal HIV exposure by calling the CEI Line: 1-866-637-2342, option 2.
  2. See U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Recommendations for the Use of Antiretroviral Drugs in During Pregnancy and Interventions to Reduce Perinatal HIV Transmission in the United States > Management of Infants Born to People With HIV Infection.
  3. See NYSDOH AI HIV Testing, Reporting and Confidentiality in New York State 2017-18 Update: Fact Sheet and Frequently Asked Questions > FAQ 11.

Shared Decision-Making

Download Printable PDF of Shared Decision-Making Statement

Date of current publication: August 8, 2023
Lead authors:
Jessica Rodrigues, MS; Jessica M. Atrio, MD, MSc; and Johanna L. Gribble, MA
Writing group: Steven M. Fine, MD, PhD; Rona M. Vail, MD; Samuel T. Merrick, MD; Asa E. Radix, MD, MPH, PhD; Christopher J. Hoffmann, MD, MPH; Charles J. Gonzalez, MD
Committee: Medical Care Criteria Committee
Date of original publication: August 8, 2023

Rationale

Throughout its guidelines, the New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) AIDS Institute (AI) Clinical Guidelines Program recommends “shared decision-making,” an individualized process central to patient-centered care. With shared decision-making, clinicians and patients engage in meaningful dialogue to arrive at an informed, collaborative decision about a patient’s health, care, and treatment planning. The approach to shared decision-making described here applies to recommendations included in all program guidelines. The included elements are drawn from a comprehensive review of multiple sources and similar  attempts to define shared decision-making, including the Institute of Medicine’s original description [Institute of Medicine 2001]. For more information, a variety of informative resources and suggested readings are included at the end of the discussion.

Benefits

The benefits to patients that have been associated with a shared decision-making approach include:

  • Decreased anxiety [Niburski, et al. 2020; Stalnikowicz and Brezis 2020]
  • Increased trust in clinicians [Acree, et al. 2020; Groot, et al. 2020; Stalnikowicz and Brezis 2020]
  • Improved engagement in preventive care [McNulty, et al. 2022; Scalia, et al. 2022; Bertakis and Azari 2011]
  • Improved treatment adherence, clinical outcomes, and satisfaction with care [Crawford, et al. 2021; Bertakis and Azari 2011; Robinson, et al. 2008]
  • Increased knowledge, confidence, empowerment, and self-efficacy [Chen, et al. 2021; Coronado-Vázquez, et al. 2020; Niburski, et al. 2020]

Approach

Collaborative care: Shared decision-making is an approach to healthcare delivery that respects a patient’s autonomy in responding to a clinician’s recommendations and facilitates dynamic, personalized, and collaborative care. Through this process, a clinician engages a patient in an open and respectful dialogue to elicit the patient’s knowledge, experience, healthcare goals, daily routine, lifestyle, support system, cultural and personal identity, and attitudes toward behavior, treatment, and risk. With this information and the clinician’s clinical expertise, the patient and clinician can collaborate to identify, evaluate, and choose from among available healthcare options [Coulter and Collins 2011]. This process emphasizes the importance of a patient’s values, preferences, needs, social context, and lived experience in evaluating the known benefits, risks, and limitations of a clinician’s recommendations for screening, prevention, treatment, and follow-up. As a result, shared decision-making also respects a patient’s autonomy, agency, and capacity in defining and managing their healthcare goals. Building a clinician-patient relationship rooted in shared decision-making can help clinicians engage in productive discussions with patients whose decisions may not align with optimal health outcomes. Fostering open and honest dialogue to understand a patient’s motivations while suspending judgment to reduce harm and explore alternatives is particularly vital when a patient chooses to engage in practices that may exacerbate or complicate health conditions [Halperin, et al. 2007].

Options: Implicit in the shared decision-making process is the recognition that the “right” healthcare decisions are those made by informed patients and clinicians working toward patient-centered and defined healthcare goals. When multiple options are available, shared decision-making encourages thoughtful discussion of the potential benefits and potential harms of all options, which may include doing nothing or waiting. This approach also acknowledges that efficacy may not be the most important factor in a patient’s preferences and choices [Sewell, et al. 2021].

Clinician awareness: The collaborative process of shared decision-making is enhanced by a clinician’s ability to demonstrate empathic interest in the patient, avoid stigmatizing language, employ cultural humility, recognize systemic barriers to equitable outcomes, and practice strategies of self-awareness and mitigation against implicit personal biases [Parish, et al. 2019].

Caveats: It is important for clinicians to recognize and be sensitive to the inherent power and influence they maintain throughout their interactions with patients. A clinician’s identity and community affiliations may influence their ability to navigate the shared decision-making process and develop a therapeutic alliance with the patient and may affect the treatment plan [KFF 2023; Greenwood, et al. 2020]. Furthermore, institutional policy and regional legislation, such as requirements for parental consent for gender-affirming care for transgender people or insurance coverage for sexual health care, may infringe upon a patient’s ability to access preventive- or treatment-related care [Sewell, et al. 2021].

Figure 1: Elements of Shared Decision-Making

Figure 1: Elements of Shared Decision-Making

Download figure: Elements of Shared Decision-Making

Health equity: Adapting a shared decision-making approach that supports diverse populations is necessary to achieve more equitable and inclusive health outcomes [Castaneda-Guarderas, et al. 2016]. For instance, clinicians may need to incorporate cultural- and community-specific considerations into discussions with women, gender-diverse individuals, and young people concerning their sexual behaviors, fertility intentions, and pregnancy or lactation status. Shared decision-making offers an opportunity to build trust among marginalized and disenfranchised communities by validating their symptoms, values, and lived experience. Furthermore, it can allow for improved consistency in patient screening and assessment of prevention options and treatment plans, which can reduce the influence of social constructs and implicit bias [Castaneda-Guarderas, et al. 2016].

Clinician bias has been associated with health disparities and can have profoundly negative effects [FitzGerald and Hurst 2017; Hall, et al. 2015]. It is often challenging for clinicians to recognize and set aside personal biases and to address biases with peers and colleagues. Consciously or unconsciously, negative or stigmatizing assumptions are often made about patient characteristics, such as race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, mental health, and substance use [Avery, et al. 2019; van Boekel, et al. 2013; Livingston, et al. 2012]. With its emphasis on eliciting patient information, a shared decision-making approach encourages clinicians to inquire about patients’ lived experiences rather than making assumptions and to recognize the influence of that experience in healthcare decision-making.

Stigma: Stigma may prevent individuals from seeking or receiving treatment and harm reduction services [Tsai, et al. 2019]. Among people with HIV, stigma and medical mistrust remain significant barriers to healthcare utilization, HIV diagnosis, and medication adherence and can affect disease outcomes [Turan, et al. 2017; Chambers, et al. 2015], and stigma among clinicians against people who use substances has been well-documented [Stone, et al. 2021; Tsai, et al. 2019; van Boekel, et al. 2013]. Sexual and reproductive health, including strategies to prevent HIV transmission, acquisition, and progression, may be subject to stigma, bias, social influence, and violence.

SHARED DECISION-MAKING IN HIV CARE
  • As prevention and treatment modalities in HIV care expand (i.e., vaccines, barriers, injectables, implants, on-demand therapies), it is important for clinicians to ask patients about their goals for prevention and treatment rather than assume that efficacy is the primary factor in patient preference [Sewell, et al. 2021].
  • The shared decision-making approach to clinical care enhances patient knowledge and uptake of new technologies and behavioral practices that align with the patient’s unique preferences and identity [Sewell, et al. 2021], ensures that the selection of a care plan is mutually agreed upon, and considers the patient’s ability to effectively use and adhere to the selected course of prevention or treatment.

Resources and Suggested Reading

In addition to the references cited below, the following resources and suggested reading may be useful to clinicians.

RESOURCES
References

Acree ME, McNulty M, Blocker O, et al. Shared decision-making around anal cancer screening among black bisexual and gay men in the USA. Cult Health Sex 2020;22(2):201-16. [PMID: 30931831]

Avery JD, Taylor KE, Kast KA, et al. Attitudes toward individuals with mental illness and substance use disorders among resident physicians. Prim Care Companion CNS Disord 2019;21(1):18m02382. [PMID: 30620451]

Bertakis KD, Azari R. Patient-centered care is associated with decreased health care utilization. J Am Board Fam Med 2011;24(3):229-39. [PMID: 21551394]

Castaneda-Guarderas A, Glassberg J, Grudzen CR, et al. Shared decision making with vulnerable populations in the emergency department. Acad Emerg Med 2016;23(12):1410-16. [PMID: 27860022]

Chambers LA, Rueda S, Baker DN, et al. Stigma, HIV and health: a qualitative synthesis. BMC Public Health 2015;15:848. [PMID: 26334626]

Chen CH, Kang YN, Chiu PY, et al. Effectiveness of shared decision-making intervention in patients with lumbar degenerative diseases: a randomized controlled trial. Patient Educ Couns 2021;104(10):2498-2504. [PMID: 33741234]

Coronado-Vázquez V, Canet-Fajas C, Delgado-Marroquín MT, et al. Interventions to facilitate shared decision-making using decision aids with patients in primary health care: a systematic review. Medicine (Baltimore) 2020;99(32):e21389. [PMID: 32769870]

Coulter A, Collins A. Making shared decision-making a reality: no decision about me, without me. 2011. https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/sites/default/files/Making-shared-decision-making-a-reality-paper-Angela-Coulter-Alf-Collins-July-2011_0.pdf

Crawford J, Petrie K, Harvey SB. Shared decision-making and the implementation of treatment recommendations for depression. Patient Educ Couns 2021;104(8):2119-21. [PMID: 33563500]

FitzGerald C, Hurst S. Implicit bias in healthcare professionals: a systematic review. BMC Med Ethics 2017;18(1):19. [PMID: 28249596]

Greenwood BN, Hardeman RR, Huang L, et al. Physician-patient racial concordance and disparities in birthing mortality for newborns. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2020;117(35):21194-21200. [PMID: 32817561]

Groot G, Waldron T, Barreno L, et al. Trust and world view in shared decision making with indigenous patients: a realist synthesis. J Eval Clin Pract 2020;26(2):503-14. [PMID: 31750600]

Hall WJ, Chapman MV, Lee KM, et al. Implicit racial/ethnic bias among health care professionals and its influence on health care outcomes: a systematic review. Am J Public Health 2015;105(12):e60-76. [PMID: 26469668]

Halperin B, Melnychuk R, Downie J, et al. When is it permissible to dismiss a family who refuses vaccines? Legal, ethical and public health perspectives. Paediatr Child Health 2007;12(10):843-45. [PMID: 19043497]

Institute of Medicine. Crossing the quality chasm: a new health system for the 21st century. 2001. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK222274/

KFF. Key data on health and health care by race and ethnicity. 2023 Mar 15. https://www.kff.org/racial-equity-and-health-policy/report/key-data-on-health-and-health-care-by-race-and-ethnicity/ [accessed 2023 May 19]

Livingston JD, Milne T, Fang ML, et al. The effectiveness of interventions for reducing stigma related to substance use disorders: a systematic review. Addiction 2012;107(1):39-50. [PMID: 21815959]

McNulty MC, Acree ME, Kerman J, et al. Shared decision making for HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with black transgender women. Cult Health Sex 2022;24(8):1033-46. [PMID: 33983866]

Niburski K, Guadagno E, Abbasgholizadeh-Rahimi S, et al. Shared decision making in surgery: a meta-analysis of existing literature. Patient 2020;13(6):667-81. [PMID: 32880820]

Parish SJ, Hahn SR, Goldstein SW, et al. The International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health process of care for the identification of sexual concerns and problems in women. Mayo Clin Proc 2019;94(5):842-56. [PMID: 30954288]

Robinson JH, Callister LC, Berry JA, et al. Patient-centered care and adherence: definitions and applications to improve outcomes. J Am Acad Nurse Pract 2008;20(12):600-607. [PMID: 19120591]

Scalia P, Durand MA, Elwyn G. Shared decision-making interventions: an overview and a meta-analysis of their impact on vaccine uptake. J Intern Med 2022;291(4):408-25. [PMID: 34700363]

Sewell WC, Solleveld P, Seidman D, et al. Patient-led decision-making for HIV preexposure prophylaxis. Curr HIV/AIDS Rep 2021;18(1):48-56. [PMID: 33417201]

Stalnikowicz R, Brezis M. Meaningful shared decision-making: complex process demanding cognitive and emotional skills. J Eval Clin Pract 2020;26(2):431-38. [PMID: 31989727]

Stone EM, Kennedy-Hendricks A, Barry CL, et al. The role of stigma in U.S. primary care physicians’ treatment of opioid use disorder. Drug Alcohol Depend 2021;221:108627. [PMID: 33621805]

Tsai AC, Kiang MV, Barnett ML, et al. Stigma as a fundamental hindrance to the United States opioid overdose crisis response. PLoS Med 2019;16(11):e1002969. [PMID: 31770387]

Turan B, Budhwani H, Fazeli PL, et al. How does stigma affect people living with HIV? The mediating roles of internalized and anticipated HIV stigma in the effects of perceived community stigma on health and psychosocial outcomes. AIDS Behav 2017;21(1):283-91. [PMID: 27272742]

van Boekel LC, Brouwers EP, van Weeghel J, et al. Stigma among health professionals towards patients with substance use disorders and its consequences for healthcare delivery: systematic review. Drug Alcohol Depend 2013;131(1-2):23-35. [PMID: 23490450]

References

ACOG. Committee opinion no. 752 summary: prenatal and perinatal human immunodeficiency virus testing. Obstet Gynecol 2018;132(3):805-6. [PMID: 30134421]

ACOG. Practice advisory: screening for syphilis in pregnancy. 2024 Apr. https://www.acog.org/clinical/clinical-guidance/practice-advisory/articles/2024/04/screening-for-syphilis-in-pregnancy [accessed 2024 Apr 23]

Baeten J. M., Donnell D., Ndase P., et al. Antiretroviral prophylaxis for HIV prevention in heterosexual men and women. N Engl J Med 2012;367(5):399-410. [PMID: 22784037]

Cassimatis I. R., Ayala L. D., Miller E. S., et al. Third-trimester repeat HIV testing: it is time we make it universal. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2021;225(5):494-99. [PMID: 33932342]

DHHS. Recommendations for the use of antiretroviral drugs during pregnancy and interventions to reduce perinatal HIV transmission in the United States. 2021 Dec 30. https://clinicalinfo.hiv.gov/en/guidelines/perinatal/antiretroviral-management-newborns-perinatal-hiv-exposure-or-hiv-infection?view=full [accessed 2022 May 23]

Fiscus S. A., Schoenbach V. J., Wilfert C. Short courses of zidovudine and perinatal transmission of HIV. N Engl J Med 1999;340(13):1040-43. [PMID: 10189281]

Kourtis A. P., Bulterys M., Nesheim S. R., et al. Understanding the timing of HIV transmission from mother to infant. JAMA 2001;285(6):709-12. [PMID: 11176886]

Mofenson L. M., Baggaley R. C., Mameletzis I. Tenofovir disoproxil fumarate safety for women and their infants during pregnancy and breastfeeding. AIDS 2017;31(2):213-32. [PMID: 27831952]

NYSDOH. Unpublished data; 2019.

Siberry G. K., Jacobson D. L., Kalkwarf H. J., et al. Lower newborn bone mineral content associated with maternal use of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate during pregnancy. Clin Infect Dis 2015;61(6):996-1003. [PMID: 26060285]

Vigano A., Mora S., Giacomet V., et al. In utero exposure to tenofovir disoproxil fumarate does not impair growth and bone health in HIV-uninfected children born to HIV-infected mothers. Antivir Ther 2011;16(8):1259-66. [PMID: 22155907]

Wade N. A., Birkhead G. S., Warren B. L., et al. Abbreviated regimens of zidovudine prophylaxis and perinatal transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus. N Engl J Med 1998;339(20):1409-14. [PMID: 9811915]

Workowski K. A., Bachmann L. H., Chan P. A., et al. Sexually transmitted infections treatment guidelines, 2021. MMWR Recomm Rep 2021;70(4):1-187. [PMID: 34292926]

Updates, Authorship, and Related Guidelines

Updates, Authorship, and Related Guidelines
Date of original publication July 21, 2020
Date of current publication September 09, 2022
Highlights of changes, additions, and updates in the September 09, 2022 edition
  • Recommendation in Universal HIV Screening in Pregnancy updated: Using an FDA-approved HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay and following the standard HIV testing algorithm, clinicians should screen all patients early in pregnancy, regardless of reported exposure, risk, or symptoms. (A2)
  • Recommendation in Testing for Acute HIV updated: If a patient’s plasma HIV RNA test result indicates a viral load ≥5,000 copies/mL (or ≥200 copies/mL for patients taking PrEP or PEP), the clinician should make a presumptive diagnosis of acute HIV, even if the results of screening and HIV-1/HIV-2 Ab differentiation immunoassays are nonreactive or indeterminate. (A2)
  • New recommendation in Testing for Acute HIV: If a patient’s viral load is detectable but lower than the levels stated above, to rule out acute HIV infection, the clinician should repeat the plasma HIV RNA test 2 weeks after the first test, preferably with a repeat HIV-1/2 Ag/Ab combination immunoassay. (A3)
  • Recommendations in Third Trimester HIV and Syphilis Testing updated:
    • Before 36 weeks’ gestation (preferably between weeks 28 and 32), clinicians should repeat HIV testing for all patients with either a negative HIV test result or no documented HIV test result early in pregnancy. (A2)
    • Clinicians should repeat HIV testing in all pregnant patients who have engaged in behaviors that put them at risk of HIV acquisition during pregnancy or have acquired other STIs. (A2)
  • New recommendation in Third Trimester HIV and Syphilis Testing: Clinicians should repeat syphilis testing along with HIV testing in the third trimester in all pregnant patients. (A2)
  • Recommendation in PrEP to Prevent HIV updated: If a patient with a negative HIV test result requests PrEP or reports being at risk of HIV acquisition, clinicians should provide or promptly refer the patient for PrEP services. (A1) PrEP with TDF/FTC is not contraindicated during pregnancy or while breastfeeding an infant.
Intended users NYS clinicians who provide care to pregnant individuals who are at risk of acquiring HIV
Lead author

Maria Teresa Timoney, MS, RN, CNM

Writing group

Steven M. Fine, MD, PhD; Rona Vail, MD; Joseph P. McGowan, MD, FACP, FIDSA; Samuel T. Merrick, MD; Asa Radix, MD, MPH, PhD; Christopher J. Hoffmann, MD, MPH; Charles J. Gonzalez, MD

Author and writing group conflict of interest disclosures

Joseph P. McGowan, MD, FACP, FIDSA: Institutional Pharma grant recipient/support, clinical trial; Gilead

Committee

Medical Care Criteria Committee

Developer and funder

New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute (NYSDOH AI)

Development process

See Guideline Development and Recommendation Ratings Scheme, below.

Related NYSDOH AI guidelines

Guideline Development and Recommendation Ratings

Guideline Development: New York State Department of Health AIDS Institute Clinical Guidelines Program
Program manager Clinical Guidelines Program, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases. See Program Leadership and Staff.
Mission To produce and disseminate evidence-based, state-of-the-art clinical practice guidelines that establish uniform standards of care for practitioners who provide prevention or treatment of HIV, viral hepatitis, other sexually transmitted infections, and substance use disorders for adults throughout New York State in the wide array of settings in which those services are delivered.
Expert committees The NYSDOH AI Medical Director invites and appoints committees of clinical and public health experts from throughout New York State to ensure that the guidelines are practical, immediately applicable, and meet the needs of care providers and stakeholders in all major regions of New York State, all relevant clinical practice settings, key New York State agencies, and community service organizations.
Committee structure
  • Leadership: AI-appointed chair, vice chair(s), chair emeritus, clinical specialist(s), JHU Guidelines Program Director, AI Medical Director, AI Clinical Consultant, AVAC community advisor
  • Contributing members
  • Guideline writing groups: Lead author, coauthors if applicable, and all committee leaders
Disclosure and management of conflicts of interest
  • Annual disclosure of financial relationships with commercial entities for the 12 months prior and upcoming is required of all individuals who work with the guidelines program, and includes disclosure for partners or spouses and primary professional affiliation.
  • The NYSDOH AI assesses all reported financial relationships to determine the potential for undue influence on guideline recommendations and, when indicated, denies participation in the program or formulates a plan to manage potential conflicts. Disclosures are listed for each committee member.
Evidence collection and review
  • Literature search and review strategy is defined by the guideline lead author based on the defined scope of a new guideline or update.
  • A comprehensive literature search and review is conducted for a new guideline or an extensive update using PubMed, other pertinent databases of peer-reviewed literature, and relevant conference abstracts to establish the evidence base for guideline recommendations.
  • A targeted search and review to identify recently published evidence is conducted for guidelines published within the previous 3 years.
  • Title, abstract, and article reviews are performed by the lead author. The JHU editorial team collates evidence and creates and maintains an evidence table for each guideline.
Recommendation development
  • The lead author drafts recommendations to address the defined scope of the guideline based on available published data.
  • Writing group members review the draft recommendations and evidence and deliberate to revise, refine, and reach consensus on all recommendations.
  • When published data are not available, support for a recommendation may be based on the committee’s expert opinion.
  • The writing group assigns a 2-part rating to each recommendation to indicate the strength of the recommendation and quality of the supporting evidence. The group reviews the evidence, deliberates, and may revise recommendations when required to reach consensus.
Review and approval process
  • Following writing group approval, draft guidelines are reviewed by all contributors, program liaisons, and a volunteer reviewer from the AI Community Advisory Committee.
  • Recommendations must be approved by two-thirds of the full committee. If necessary to achieve consensus, the full committee is invited to deliberate, review the evidence, and revise recommendations.
  • Final approval by the committee chair and the NYSDOH AI Medical Director is required for publication.
External reviews
  • External review of each guideline is invited at the developer’s discretion.
  • External reviewers recognized for their experience and expertise review guidelines for accuracy, balance, clarity, and practicality and provide feedback.
Update process
  • JHU editorial staff ensure that each guideline is reviewed and determined to be current upon the 3-year anniversary of publication; guidelines that provide clinical recommendations in rapidly changing areas of practice may be reviewed annually. Published literature is surveilled to identify new evidence that may prompt changes to existing recommendations or development of new recommendations.
  • If changes in the standard of care, newly published studies, new drug approval, new drug-related warning, or a public health emergency indicate the need for immediate change to published guidelines, committee leadership will make recommendations and immediate updates and will invite full committee review as indicated.
Recommendation Ratings Scheme
Strength Quality of Evidence
Rating Definition Rating Definition
A Strong 1 Based on published results of at least 1 randomized clinical trial with clinical outcomes or validated laboratory endpoints.
B Moderate * Based on either a self-evident conclusion; conclusive, published, in vitro data; or well-established practice that cannot be tested because ethics would preclude a clinical trial.
C Optional 2 Based on published results of at least 1 well-designed, nonrandomized clinical trial or observational cohort study with long-term clinical outcomes.
2† Extrapolated from published results of well-designed studies (including nonrandomized clinical trials) conducted in populations other than those specifically addressed by a recommendation. The source(s) of the extrapolated evidence and the rationale for the extrapolation are provided in the guideline text. One example would be results of studies conducted predominantly in a subpopulation (e.g., one gender) that the committee determines to be generalizable to the population under consideration in the guideline.
3 Based on committee expert opinion, with rationale provided in the guideline text.

Last updated on April 30, 2024