Access to treatment and care in safe clinical settings improves people’s lives with HIV. The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted
vital HIV programs and services, increasing the risk of adverse health outcomes for people with HIV and HIV transmission
rates in the community. This systematic literature review provides a meta-analysis of HIV testing disruptions and a synthesis
of HIV/AIDS services adapted during COVID-19. We searched scholarly databases from 01 January 2020 to 30 June 2022
using key terms on HIV testing rates and services during the COVID-19 pandemic. The process of how the included articles
were identifed, selected, appraised, and synthesised was reported according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic
Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. We included 17 articles that reported changes in HIV testing during
the COVID-19 pandemic and 22 that reported adaptations in HIV/AIDS services. We found that HIV testing decreased by
37% during the search period because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Service providers adopted novel strategies to support
remote service delivery by expanding community antiretroviral therapy dispensing, setting up primary care outreach points,
and instituting multi-month dispensing services to sustain client care. Therefore, service providers and policymakers should
explore alternative strategies to increase HIV testing rates impacted by COVID-19 and leverage funding to continue provid ing the identifed adapted services