Determinants of delayed diagnosis of HIV infection in France, 1993–1995

Abstract
To describe the circumstances of the first HIV-positive test and to study the determinants of a delayed diagnosis of HIV infection. In a retrospective study among adult AIDS patients diagnosed between July 1993 and May 1995 in two French districts, data on socioeconomic characteristics, circumstances of first HIV-positive test and attitudes and behaviours regarding medical care were collected in a confidential interview and analysed for potential association with a late test, defined as a first HIV-positive test within 6 months of AIDS diagnosis. Of the 359 AIDS patients studied, 69 (19.2%) had a late test. Late testers were more likely than other patients to have had an HIV-positive test because of clinical symptoms (89.7 versus 38.9%, P P Despite incentives to be tested for HIV, many individuals in France are still tested too late, even if they are in known high-risk groups. Efforts to test HIV-infected people as early as possible should be made by increasing the perception of HIV risk and decreasing the level of missed opportunities for testing. Current case management approaches make this recommendation critically important from both public health and an individual perspective.