People across England are being encouraged to take free finger-prick HIV tests in their own homes.
To mark National HIV Testing Week, the tests can now be ordered free on the NHS via this website. The tests are small enough to fit through a letterbox and arrive in plain packaging, with instructions on what do to if the test is positive.
Test results take just 15 minutes and are part of a drive to end new HIV cases in England by 2030.
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It comes as an estimated 95,900 people are living with HIV in England, of whom about 4,400 are undiagnosed.
The HIV test works in a similar way to an at-home pregnancy test or covid lateral flow test, but uses a few drops of blood from a prick on the finger. If preferred, people can order a test where a small blood sample is sent to a lab and screened for both HIV and syphilis at the same time.
Free HIV testing is also available in-person from local sexual health clinics.
The Terrence Higgins Trust, which runs National HIV Testing Week for the Department of Health, is working to raise awareness of the kits, including among heterosexuals. It has been collaborating with BBC soap EastEnders on a new storyline where character Zack Hudson is diagnosed with the virus.
Taku Mukiwa, head of health programmes at the Terrence Higgins Trust, said: "It's truly never been quicker, easier or more convenient to test for HIV than during this year's National HIV Testing Week. Gay and bisexual men and black African people continue to be the most impacted by HIV in the UK, but anyone who's sexually active can be affected and should think about testing.
"As the EastEnders HIV storyline we've been advising on shows, the truth is it's always better to know your HIV status, whether positive or negative. If it's negative, you can make sure it stays that way.
"While, as Zack in EastEnders is learning, huge advances in HIV treatment mean you can live a long healthy life with the virus, have children who are HIV-negative and that HIV can't be passed on to anyone else."
Dr Alison Brown, interim head of HIV surveillance at the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), said: "HIV does not discriminate, so no matter your gender or sexual orientation, using condoms and PrEP if you're eligible are key to prevention.
"In the UK, people who are unaware they are living with HIV are most likely to pass the virus on to others. Taking up a free and confidential HIV test regularly when having condomless sex will ensure you're diagnosed early and started on effective treatment, helping to reduce transmission of HIV and the number of people with undiagnosed HIV."
The most recent UKHSA data shows HIV testing rates are still 20% lower than before the Covid-19 pandemic, with heterosexual men in particular now testing less than in 2019. HIV testing among gay and bisexual men increased by 23% from 2020 to 2021, but rates of testing among women have fallen by 22% compared with 2019.
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